Vanguard Magazine

Vanguard AugSep 2018

Preserving capacity, General Tom Lawson, Chief of the Defence Staff, Keys to Canadian SAR

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capability to deal with new-year ice of up to one meter, will be able to increase the federal government's presence as well as improve its situational awareness in the Arctic during the active shipping season. They will vastly increase the capability of the government to deal with search and rescue, scientific research and support to other federal government departments in the Arctic. They will provide outstanding platforms to manage a crisis in their arctic area of operation. Canada is looking at acquiring three ice- breakers and converting them for their ice- breaking needs, which will improve the Ca- nadian Coast Guard's ability to maintain its presence in the Arctic Archipelago. The red and white ships with the large maple leaf on their sides are the most visible federal pres- ence from a sovereignty point of view up to now. The Canadian Coast Guard has also established a number of Canadian Coast Guard Auxiliary stations in the Arctic which will improve Canada's ability to do marine search and rescue as committed under the Arctic Council's Agreement on Coopera- tion on Aeronautical and Maritime Search and Rescue in the Arctic. The Inuvik Cana- dian Coast Guard Auxiliary is receiving two search and rescue Sea-Doos. Under the Ocean Protection Plan, the federal government will be seen to be better governing the Arctic Ocean in line with its sovereign responsibility. Transport Canada and the Canadian Coast Guard are developing a series of shipping corridors through the Arctic. Such corridors, if made compulsory, would minimize the risks to marine life and the Inuit communities. They would also allow the concentration of limited resources, such as mapping of the seabed for safer navigation, in this vast area. In April 2016, the Pew Charitable Trusts produced a report titled "The Integrated www.vanguardcanada.com AUGUST/SEPTEMBER 2018 17 ArCtiC Nunatsiavut Nunavut Nunavik Inuvialuit Settlement Region Nunatsiavut Nunavut Nunavik Inuvialuit Settlement Region CANADA CANADA GREENLAND Inuit-identified areas of importance Inuit Nunangat 2014 ship tracks Canadian exclusive economic zones 0 400 Kilometres 0 400 Kilometres Map 4 Canadian Arctic Shipping Traffic Intersects Many Inuit-Use Areas Shipping patterns and identified Inuit areas of importance, 2014 Sources: exactAIS Archive, Satellite AIS Data—Arctic, http://www.exactearth.com; Nunavut Planning Commission, 2014 Draft Nunavut Land Use Plan (DNLUP) Spatial Data, http://www.nunavut.ca/en/downloads; Inuvialuit Settlement Region (ISR) Community Conservation Plan, http://jointsecretariat.ca/resources; Flanders Marine Institute, VLIZ Maritime Boundaries Geodatabase, accessed Sept. 4, 2015, http://www. marineregions.org © 2016 The Pew Charitable Trusts Pew Charitable Trusts Graphic Sin título-2 1 16/02/2017 14:19:46

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