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Canada Set to Increase Arctic Surveillance, But Gaps Remain


A new, $36 million remotely piloted aircraft system (RPAS) is scheduled to start Arctic monitoring early this year. A $30 million Arctic surveillance complex was also due to be completed in 2023, but delays have brought the new completion date to March 2025.

In November 2022, Canada’s auditor general reported that aging equipment has left gaps in the region’s security. The auditor reported that traffic in Canadian Arctic waters has more than tripled since 1990, with all-time highs in 2019 and 2020 despite temporary bans on entering the region amid the pandemic.

Ellen Kennedy, spokesperson for the office of the Minister of Transport, told The Epoch Times the RPAS and new surveillance complex in Iqaliut, Nunavut, are two actions the government is taking to increase security.

“We are continuing to take the [auditor’s] findings and recommendations into account and will continue to take steps to address them,” Kennedy told The Epoch Times via email.

The new Arctic National Aerial Surveillance Program (NASP) Complex in Iqaluit will support the maintenance of aircraft in the region and extend surveillance operations into late fall or winter, Kennedy said. She continued, “It will allow NASP aircraft to operate  in the Arctic as needed and to conduct missions in support of marine pollution prevention, emergency response, ice reconnaissance, search and rescue, and the satellite monitoring of vessels.”

Auditor General Karen Hogan told reporters in November: “The ability to be able to surveil the Arctic and monitor what’s happening requires tools, whether it be vessels or aircrafts or satellites or infrastructure. … All of those are aging.” Satellites essential to surveillance of the Arctic are “nearing their end” by 2026, she said, according to Blacklock’s Reporter.

Hogan’s report said: “The lack of awareness about vessels in the Arctic creates vulnerabilities that, if left unaddressed, could lead to incidents that would affect Canada’s security, safety, environment and economy. … A comprehensive understanding of what happens in the Arctic is essential.”

A report by the London-based private intelligence firm Grey Dynamics released Jan. 1, titled “Canada’s Arctic Policy 2023: A 12-Month Outlook,” said “it is unlikely Canada will face increased security threats in the Arctic region” this year.

It said “any future conflict over resources, control of shipping lanes, or other related issues is contingent on the ice melting to sufficient levels.”

It noted a recent increase in militarization in Russia’s Arctic territory, but said “there is no evidence to suggest this increase will impact Canadian security over the next 12 months.”

Infrastructure in Canada is outdated by “roughly 30 years” it said. “Consequently, the technology cannot detect modern weapons or stealth craft in aerial or submersible forms.”

Tara MacIsaac

​​Tara MacIsaac is an Epoch Times reporter based in Toronto.



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