The Telegram (St. John's)

Filling the fleet

Feds close to deal with Quebec shipyard for coast guard icebreaker­s

- BY LEE BERTHIAUME

The federal government is close to a deal with Davie Shipbuildi­ng that would see the Quebec shipyard provide several used icebreaker­s to bolster the Canadian Coast Guard’s own aging fleet.

While final details are still being worked out, sources have told The Canadian Press that an agreement is imminent after months of intense — and at times contentiou­s — closeddoor negotiatio­ns.

The pending deal represents a win for Davie and the Quebec government, both of which have been demanding more federal work for the shipyard after it laid off 800 workers at its shipyard in Levis late last year.

It is not, however, exactly what Davie originally proposed: the company wanted to convert three medium icebreaker­s and one heavy vessel and lease them to the coast guard, whose own fleet is nearing the end of its useful life.

The company will still do conversion work on the three medium icebreaker­s, sources say, but the coast guard will take full ownership of the vessels instead of leasing them.

The two sides also remain far apart on the heavy icebreaker, which Davie has been pushing hard despite strong reticence from senior coast guard officials who say it does not meet their needs.

The federal shipbuildi­ng strategy does include plans for one heavy icebreaker, the Canadian Coast Guard ship John G. Diefenbake­r, which could explain the coast guard’s hesitation, said University of Calgary professor Rob Huebert.

“A lot of effort went into the design of the Diefenbake­r,” said Huebert, who has worked extensivel­y with the coast guard. “If I was the coast guard, I would be terrified that if I got the Davie ship, I would not get the Diefenbake­r.”

Word of the pending deal comes in the face of even more bad news for the coast guard’s existing icebreaker­s, which are on average over 35 years old and have lost hundreds of operationa­l days in recent years due to mechanical breakdowns.

The most recent headache came in late April, when CCGS Terry Fox ran aground near Bide Arm, N.L.

The vessel sailed back to St. John’s under its own power, an official said, where repairs were conducted on two holes in its hull, but it was later determined that more work would be required to get it back into service.

That leaves the 49-year-old CCGS Louis S. St-laurent as the coast guard’s only heavy icebreaker until the Terry Fox is up and operationa­l again, though coast guard commission­er Jeffery Hutchinson said the service could cover for it.

“It will be back in service as part of our Arctic program this summer,” Hutchinson told a parliament­ary committee on Tuesday, “and we’re able to cover all Arctic requiremen­ts in our program by reallocati­ng resources internally.”

But coast guard officials have conceded for years that they need additional icebreaker­s to supplement their fleet, and suggested they could turn to novel solutions such as leasing vessels or hiring private companies to help them.

“We’re stuck in this kind of limbo with the coast guard where their vessels keep getting longer in the tooth and what they need to do just keeps going up and up and up,” said Huebert.

“There is a dire need for them getting some modernized icebreaker­s. No question about it.”

 ?? CP FILE PHOTO ?? The MV Asterix at Davie Shipbuildi­ng in Levis, Que., in October 2015.
CP FILE PHOTO The MV Asterix at Davie Shipbuildi­ng in Levis, Que., in October 2015.

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