Rijpsburg, a now abandoned
Dutch settlement on
Spitsbergen on
Cape Boheman (
Bohemanflya), at the north site of
Nordfjorden in the Isfjord, stood roughly diagonally opposite
Longyearbyen. The
Rotterdam-based (a navigation company) built it in 1920, using prefabricated huts, for the mining of coal. Twelve
Dutch staff and 52
German miners started mining coal here that year. The Dutch Spitsbergen Company, founded in 1920, bought a mine in
Green Harbour from the Russians and mined coal from 1921 to 1926. The company renamed its settlement '''' after the Dutch explorer
Willem Barentsz. In 1932 the company sold the mine, including its settlement , to the Soviet trust
Arktikugol.
2006 fire On 17 October 2006, Norwegian inspectors detected a smouldering
underground fire in Barentsburg, prompting fears that an open fire might break out, which would have forced the total evacuation of Barentsburg for an indefinite period of time, and would also have caused environmental problems of unknown magnitude for the entire archipelago. The fire was later contained. Coal mining resumed at the end of 2010.
2020s In 2022, Russia announced new investment plans to support its presence in Barentsburg and
Pyramiden. Then, in 2023, amid continuing tensions around Russia's war against Ukraine, the Russian Consulate General and Arktikugol staged a
May 9 Day victory parade through Barentsburg consisting of 50 cars, snowmobiles, trucks and buses and also including a low-flying
Mi-8 helicopter. While the
Governor of Svalbard,
Lars Fause, was reportedly invited to attend, he declined. According to a report in
the Economist in 2025, relations between Russian and other towns were better during the Cold War, with residents ending visits on national days. ==Status==