Pratica di Shadowing: Why the world's superpowers are racing to control the Arctic - BBC World Service - Impara a parlare inglese con YouTube

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What happens in the Arctic does not stay in the Arctic.
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What happens in the Arctic does not stay in the Arctic.
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There are things happening in the Arctic now that would have been unthinkable 20 years ago.
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This is the region warming faster than anywhere else on Earth.
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And as the climate changes, so does its strategic importance.
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We need Greenland for national security and even international security.
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Major powers are turning their eyes north.
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Looking for resources, new routes through the ice, and a way to strengthen their position on the global stage.
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A lot of countries have come out with Arctic strategies.
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It's part of how the international order is being challenged.
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Here are five reasons why the Arctic has become one of the world's most hotly contested regions.
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To understand this, we need to look at the world in a different way.
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Far from just a frozen ocean, eight countries have territory in the Arctic Circle.
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The United States, Canada, Greenland, which is a semi-autonomous part of Denmark, Iceland, Norway, Sweden, Finland and Russia.
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During the Cold War between the US and Soviet Union, going over the pole was a potential route for missile strikes.
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Both countries expanded their military operations, with the US establishing a base in the north of Greenland.
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But in 1987, with the Cold War coming to an end, Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev proposed the scaling down of military activity in the Arctic.
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What Gorbachev was trying to articulate was a vision where the Arctic parties would focus on areas where they could find common cause.
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In the years that followed, the eight Arctic nations formed the Arctic Council and agreed to work together on research and environmental protection.
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Arctic and Non-arctic Arctic states opened research bases with countries like China, India and South Korea investigating how the region impacts weather patterns thousands of kilometres away in Asia.
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The Arctic has had this reputation of being sort of an exceptional place of peace and cooperation.
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That narrative continued until Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
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In 2022, Russia reopened the Cold War's fault lines.
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Within months, Finland and Sweden applied to join NATO, the Western military alliance.
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The Arctic map became Russia on one side and NATO members on the other.
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The border between Norway, Finland and Russia is effectively a front line for Russia and NATO.
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The Arctic saw direct conflict when a Russian air base in the Arctic Circle was attacked by Ukrainian drones.
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The region is critical to Russia's military.
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Most of its nuclear capability is based there.
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Russia has reopened dozens of Soviet era bases and used Arctic waters to test hypersonic cruise missiles.
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Russian and American fighter jets have come into close proximity in the skies near Alaska.
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And the West is also expanding its Arctic presence.
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2024 saw NATO's biggest drills in the region since the Cold War.
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The US Army has reactivated a specialised Arctic force in Alaska, and President Trump has proposed something bolder.
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We need Greenland for national security and international security.
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So I think we'll go as far as we have to go.
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We need Greenland, and the world needs us to have Greenland.
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The US still has a military base in Greenland, and the response to Mr. Trump's suggestion was clear.
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Polls suggest most Greenlanders don't want to be part of the US.
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The majority want to be independent.
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For Donald Trump, a strong presence in the Arctic is key to countering the partnership between Russia and China, which the two countries describe as a friendship without limits.
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You don't even need binoculars.
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You look outside, you have China ships all over the place.
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You have Russian ships all over the place.
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We're not letting that happen. Russian and Chinese Coast Guard ships have carried out joint patrols in the Arctic Ocean, and bombers from both countries have flown together near Alaska.
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It's the first time that we've seen these two countries fly together like that.
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The worry is that some of those drills, exercises, patrols might generate a risky escalation, a miscalculation.
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China says its actions are about deepening cooperation with Russia and aren't aimed at third parties.
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However, this relationship has tensions of its own.
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There's been a danger that Russia's fully aware of is that the more and more it collaborates with China, the more it's giving China legitimacy to act as a very powerful near-Arctic state.
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China describes itself as a near-Arctic state, despite being 1400km from the Arctic Circle.
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In 2018, it launched a range of investment projects it called the Polar Silk Road.
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But it's hit road blocks in communities wary of being over reliant on China.
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They want to be a polar superpower.
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We want a relationship to China, but we do not want to be dependent on China.
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There's no question that it was trying to sort of have a significant impact in the Arctic, but it hasn't come to fruition.
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Most of China's economic success in the Arctic has come from partnering with Russia on projects like this natural gas extraction field.
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And shipping this gas has been made easier by the Arctic Ocean's melting sea ice.
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This was how much there was in summer 1979, and this is in 2024.
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A reduction of 2.6 million km², which is roughly the size of Argentina.
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Many see this as an opportunity to exploit the Arctic for shipping during the summer months.
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Of the three potential routes, the only one currently viable is along Russia's northern coast, known as the Northern Sea Route.
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There's been the hope that more and more traffic could bypass the usage of the Suez Canal and shave thousands of miles off shipping time and distance.
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97 cargo voyages were made using the Northern Sea Route in 2024, mostly exports from Russia to China.
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But compared to Suez, with 13000 ships passing through every year, it's a long way from being a competitive option.
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The Arctic Ocean is frozen for most of the year.
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Even in summer it's an unpredictable environment.
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You're going to have a situation where there are very small windows of time where there could be the potential to transit, and that doesn't offer the certainty the shipping industry needs.
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While questions remain about shipping, there's something else the melting ice may reveal.
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There's been this narrative of the last frontier of sort of rich access to resources that haven't been accessible in the past.
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It's estimated that 30% of the world's undiscovered gas and 13% of undiscovered oil is there.
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Minerals too, particularly in Greenland.
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If the US were to gain access to Greenland's resources, it could significantly reduce our dependence on foreign suppliers, particularly China, which currently operates a virtual monopoly on the rare earth market.
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But getting these resources is far from simple.
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You're dealing with environments that are remote, expensive to operate in, lacking infrastructure, and where there is very little skilled labour close by.
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Despite this, global interest in the region, and what further ice melt might reveal, remains.
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And that could introduce further competition to this already contested region.
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15 years ago you would have said the Arctic is a region best characterised by high north, low tension.
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Now we should adapt that slogan to high north, high tension.

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Contesto e Antefatti

Il video della BBC offre uno sguardo approfondito sulle dinamiche geopolitiche che coinvolgono l'Artico, una regione che ha visto un incremento della sua importanza strategica negli ultimi decenni. Mentre il clima continua a cambiare, superpotenze globali come Stati Uniti, Russia e Cina stanno intensificando le loro attività nella regione, mirando a risorse preziose e vie di navigazione. Comprendere le implicazioni di queste trasformazioni può non solo arricchire il nostro vocabolario e la nostra comprensione dell'inglese, ma anche offrirci spunti utili per la comunicazione quotidiana.

Le 5 Frasi Chiave per la Comunicazione Quotidiana

  • “What happens in the Arctic does not stay in the Arctic.” - Una frase che invita a riflettere sull'impatto globale delle azioni locali.
  • “We need Greenland for national security and international security.” - Un'affermazione che sottolinea l'importanza di specifiche regioni per la sicurezza globale.
  • “The Arctic has had this reputation of being a sort of an exceptional place of peace and cooperation.” - Un commento sulla percezione dell'Artico come zona di cooperazione internazionale.
  • “Russia has reopened dozens of Soviet era bases.” - Espresso rispetto a come il passato influenza le attuali politiche militari.
  • “China describes itself as a near-Arctic state.” - Una frase che evidenzia le ambizioni geografiche della Cina.

Guida Passo-passo per il Shadowing

Per migliorare la tua pronuncia e la tua fluidità in inglese, segui questi passaggi mentre guardi il video:

  1. Ascolta attentamente: Riproduci il video senza interrompere, cercando di afferrare il contesto generale.
  2. Annota le frasi chiave: Scrivi le frasi che ti colpiscono di più e che desideri praticare, come quelle sopra menzionate.
  3. Impara le frasi: Pronuncia le frasi più volte, cercando di imitare l'intonazione e il ritmo del parlante. Questo è efficace per migliorare la pronuncia inglese.
  4. Shadowing: Riavvolgi il video e pronuncia le frasi in simultanea con il narratore. Questo metodo di shadowspeak ti aiuterà a sentirti più sicuro nel parlare.
  5. Ripeti l'esercizio: Prosegui fino a quando non ti senti a tuo agio con le frasi. La pratica costante ti porterà a una pratica di conversazione in inglese efficace.

Utilizzando queste strategie, potrai imparare l'inglese con youtube in modo interessante e utile, mentre migliori le tue abilità comunicative!

Cos'è la tecnica dello Shadowing?

Shadowing è una tecnica di apprendimento delle lingue supportata da studi scientifici, originariamente sviluppata per la formazione dei traduttori professionisti e resa popolare dal poliglotta Dr. Alexander Arguelles. Il metodo è semplice ma potente: ascolti un audio in inglese di madrelingua e lo ripeti immediatamente ad alta voce — come un'ombra che segue il parlante con un ritardo di solo 1–2 secondi. A differenza dell'ascolto passivo o degli esercizi di grammatica, lo shadowing costringe il tuo cervello e i muscoli della bocca a elaborare e riprodurre simultaneamente i modelli di discorso reale. La ricerca dimostra che migliora significativamente la precisione della pronuncia, l'intonazione, il ritmo, il discorso connesso, la comprensione dell'ascolto e la fluidità del parlato — rendendolo uno dei metodi più efficaci per la preparazione alla prova di speaking dell'IELTS e per la comunicazione reale in inglese.

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