Monday, September 10, 2007

Protection Of Canada's North Too Late?

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As Rough As It May Seem,It's Still Steady As You Go...

Canada 'to reclaim Arctic waters'



By Ian Gunn
BBC News, Vancouver



Canada has announced plans for six naval patrol vessels and a deep-water port in the north to assert its claim to territorial waters in the Arctic.

Other countries, including the US, say the waters are international territory.

The $3bn (£1.5bn) announcement at Canada's Pacific naval base comes in

part to fulfil an election promise.

Ottawa also sees economic potential in protecting its claim to the Arctic, as

the area is thought to be rich in natural resources.

'Lucrative'

Since the end of the Cold War, Canada's modest military and coast guard

have only rarely patrolled its northern coast line. Now Prime Minister

Stephen Harper says the time has come to re-assert Canada's claim to the

north.



At a dockside ceremony complete with

brassbands, brassbands, flutteringflags

and sharp white uniforms, the prime minister

promised to build at least six new patrol ships

with ice-breaking hulls to extend his country's

presence into the Arctic Ocean.

That presence, Ottawa hopes, will remind other countries - including the

US - of Canada's claim to the waters off its northern coast.

The claim could also have serious economic implications. Natural resources

including oil, gas and diamonds are thought to lurk - perhaps in abundance

- under the Arctic ice.

And then there is the North-West Passage - the northern shipping route

between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans that European explorers sought

for centuries.

With a warming climate, the route may just become viable and lucrative.

A deciding factor in the territorial disputes may be whether Canadians ever

actually venture into the areas in question. And so the time has

come, Ottawa says, to make sure that they do.