Lethbridge Herald

Arctic research network funding to expire soon

- THE CANADIAN PRESS — OTTAWA

Just one day after the federal government saved an Arctic climate change research program from the brink of death, another is knocking on the door looking for salvation.

Louis Fortier, a University of Laval biologist, is the head of ArcticNet, a consortium of Canadian Arctic climate science researcher­s, Inuit, and all levels of government which study the effects of climate change in the Arctic.

As of next March 31, the 15-year-old program will die unless Ottawa bails it out.

ArcticNet’s annual budget is $9.6 million. Fortier said there is a competitio­n he can apply to through the Network Centres of Excellence program, which the government is continuing, but that process won’t come through with funding until at least 2019 and there is only $9 million a year available for all networks, which is less than what ArcticNet alone needs, he said.

Fortier said ArcticNet is just one of many places where Canada’s commitment to the Arctic and Arctic research is being questioned.

“We’re going to fall back to what we call the Dark Ages of northern research in Canada,” he said. “In the ’70s and ’80s we were really lagging. In the ’90s we invested. We reaped the benefits, we were playing almost our role internatio­nally in the Arctic. Not quite, but almost. And now we’re losing ground again.”

He said Canada’s sovereignt­y in the North could be in jeopardy if more is not done to understand what is happening there, the impacts of climate change and how to develop sustainabl­e solutions for developmen­t and the health and well-being of Inuit communitie­s.

“One of the best ways to demonstrat­e sovereignt­y is to research your territorie­s, to try to develop in a sustainabl­e way and to give a shining example to the world of how it should be done,” said Fortier.

On Wednesday, Science Minister Kirsty Duncan announced $1.6 million over the next two years to keep the Polar Environmen­t Arctic Research Laboratory, or PEARL, running until the fall of 2019. Its current funding runs out at the end of March and there was an outcry from scientists after this year’s federal budget didn’t renew that funding.

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