For indigenous peoples, establishment of $30 million Álgu Fund marks new beginning in Arctic Council

By Atle Staalesen, The Independent Barents Observer - May 16, 2017
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A financial instrument designed to help indigenous groups raise resources for involvement in decision-making and participation in the Arctic Council is taking shape.

The Álgu Fund is a charitable foundation formed on the belief that decisions made about the Arctic should be shaped by those who have lived there since time immemorial and be inclusive of their cultures, traditions, and knowledge, a press release from the Arctic Council Indigenous Peoples Secretariat reads.

Nenets, one of the Arctic's indigenous peoples, live a nomadic life on the tundra. (Thomas Nilsen / The Independent Barents Observer)
Nenets, one of the Arctic’s indigenous peoples, live a nomadic life on the tundra. (Thomas Nilsen / The Independent Barents Observer)

Álgu means “beginning” in the Sámi language.

The formal documents on the creation of the fund were signed by representatives of the Aleut, Athabaskans, Gwich’in, Sámi, and over forty Russian Indigenous nations, ahead of this week’s summit in Fairbanks, Alaska.

“Our goal is to build the Álgu Fund’s endowment to providing stable, predictable, and reliable funding to our organizations,” says Jim Gamble of Aleut International Association, who will serve as the inaugural Chair. “These resources will strengthen our capacity to participate fully, consult with communities meaningfully, and undertake the research necessary, to shape circumpolar policymaking about our Arctic home.”

The objective is to raise $30 million for the fund.

The establishment of the new financial mechanism has been in the process over the last year and was a key issue also in a Arctic Council SAO plenary session in Portland, Maine, October 2016.

“We believe that this [Fund] adequately reflects the goal of the Permanent Participants: a new beginning for our organizations to fully take advantage of and contribute to the unique opportunity that comes with Indigenous participation within the Arctic Council,” the Indigenous Peoples Secretariat,  a part of the Arctic Council, underlined in that meeting.

The Indigenous Peoples Secretariat (IPS) includes six Arctic Indigenous organizations. It holds Permanent Participant status in the Arctic Council.

The members of the IPS are: the Aleut International Association, the Arctic Athabaskan Council, the Gwich’in International Council, the Inuit Circumpolar Council, the Russian Association of Indigenous Peoples of the North (RAIPON) and the Saami Council.