
Ceasefire at the Melt Line
The cartoon mocks geopolitical triumphalism and resource greed by showing leaders celebrating a neat diplomatic victory over Arctic territory even as climate change—driven in part by the same scramble for shipping and drilling—makes that victory physically meaningless. They are dividing ownership of
At an ornate 'Polar Peace Summit,' rival generals and diplomats in medal-covered dress uniforms kneel on the Arctic ice as if around a war table, using rulers and fountain pens to draw a crisp new boundary line across a giant map laid directly on the frozen surface. They smile, shake hands, and point proudly to labeled future shipping lanes and drilling blocks. But the ice beneath the map is transparent and visibly splitting along the same line they are drawing: dark meltwater surges upward, tiny oil rigs lean, cargo ships tilt, and miniature planted flags slide toward the crack. Their ceremony projects control and permanence, while the ground under the agreement is literally dissolving.