National Post (National Edition)

Is billion-dollar Arctic highway for Chinese mine?

CHINA TO BENEFIT MORE THAN NUNAVUT OR CANADA, CRITIC SAYS, BUT INUIT GROUP DISAGREES

- MEAGAN CAMPBELL

Questions are being raised about plans to build a $1-billion, 700-km highway from Yellowknif­e to a proposed port on Nunavut’s Arctic coast, paid for by Canadians but which critics say would largely serve Chinese government interests.

Last week, Transport Minister Marc Garneau pledged more than $50 million to the Northwest Territorie­s and Nunavut to study the feasibilit­y of a highway to replace ice roads that are no longer reliable amid climate change.

While local leaders applaud the funding, critics say the largest benefit would go to a mining company, MMG, which is controlled by the Chinese government and holds several mineral deposits in the region where the highway would be built.

“It is worth flagging to people that the main beneficiar­y will be the Chinese government, more so than the government of Nunavut or the government of Canada,” says Michael Byers, a political science professor at the University of British Columbia who holds the Canada Research Chair in Global Politics and Internatio­nal Law. “This is for the mining projects and nothing else.”

Byers does not see a problem with a Chinese-controlled company operating mines in Canada, but wonders if the company will be allowed to bring in Chinese workers to build the road and if Canadian taxpayers should foot the bill.

As government­s plan to increase access to natural resources, he says, “We think we’re stumbling into a lot of easy money when in fact the costs are very high and in some cases actually exceed the benefit.”

The proposed route would open up the Slave Geological Province, which contains unexplored zinc and copper deposits, said the mining company MMG in a statement last week.

“On behalf of MMG, I would like to extend my sincere thanks to the Canadian government for their support and funding,” said CEO Geoffrey Gao in the statement.

The route would be more than 100 kilometres away from the nearest communitie­s, Kugluktuk and Cambridge Bay. Still, Stanley Anablak, president of the Kitikmeot Inuit Associatio­n, says the highway would lower their costs for everything from building materials to loaves of bread, which cost between $6 and $10 at northern stores.

His associatio­n represents five communitie­s, which he says are the last to be serviced when a ship from Quebec arrives with supplies once per year. He says his associatio­n would also profit from the highway tolls, and he argues Canadians — rather than the Chinese — should pay for the constructi­on to ensure the road is available to the public, not only mining companies.

“Canadian taxpayers have been paying for highways in the southern part of Canada,” Anablak says. “Our organizati­on’s trying to create jobs that are badly needed up here.”

The first all-weather road across the Arctic Circle, the Dempster Highway, was a 20-year project completed in 1979, fulfilling former prime minister John Diefenbake­r’s vision, two days after he died, for an accessible Arctic.

The estimated cost of constructi­ng the new highway from Yellowknif­e is $1 billion, but the cost is uncertain due to the challenge of building on melting permafrost.

“The problem with (permafrost) is, if you tear into it just like you do a regular road-building project, you’ll wind up with just a bunch of melting mud,” says Lake Pickell, general manager of Arctic Constructi­on, a contractor with headquarte­rs in British Columbia that has built all-weather roads in the Yukon. “You might have a big grassy plain, and it looks quite beautiful, but if you tear into it … it’ll start to thaw out, and then now it’s black, and it’s thawing, and the sun’s being attracted to it, and you’ve created this open sore in the tundra.”

The highway would require contractor­s to lay down geotextile matting to circulate cool air to the ground beneath the new road, says Pickell. He says this type of road could withstand melting permafrost and can even be built atop swamps. To avoid digging into the permafrost, contractor­s would haul material from off-site and use a bulldozer to compress it.

“You dump, and you ‘doze, and you keep just working your way ahead,” he says.

 ?? BEN NELMS / BLOOMBERG ?? Ice roads, like this one shown in an aerial photo near Yellowknif­e,
are no longer considered reliable due to the warming climate.
BEN NELMS / BLOOMBERG Ice roads, like this one shown in an aerial photo near Yellowknif­e, are no longer considered reliable due to the warming climate.

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