The Niagara Falls Review

Feds ask shipyards to make their cases for building missing heavy icebreaker

Vessel was first promised years ago but was quietly taken off to-do list

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA—There is a new lead in the case of the missing icebreaker, though exactly how the story will end remains to be seen.

The fate of the Canadian Coast Guard’s next heavy icebreaker has been wrapped in mystery since the federal Liberals quietly removed the project from Vancouver shipyard Seaspan’s order book in May.

The ship was first promised by Stephen Harper’s Conservati­ve government more than a decade ago and its disappeara­nce from the to-do list prompted questions and speculatio­n within official Ottawa, including whether the vessel was being cancelled.

On Friday, the Liberal government pulled back the curtain by asking Canadian shipyards to essentiall­y make their cases for building the vessel, which the

Harper government dubbed the CCGS John G. Diefenbake­r.

The Diefenbake­r, whose $1.3billion budget is under review, was supposed to replace the CCGS Louis S. St-Laurent in 2017. The St-Laurent has been in operation since 1969, though the coast guard insists it is in good shape.

Shipyards will have two weeks to respond with informatio­n on their “capability and capacity” to construct and deliver the icebreaker, according to Public Services and Procuremen­t Canada.

“Our government continues to deliver on its commitment to equip the coast guard with the ships that it needs,” Public Procuremen­t Minister Anita Anand said in a statement.

“Given the importance of icebreakin­g services and the complexity of this build, we are exploring all options to ensure that the ship is delivered as expeditiou­sly as possible.”

The opportunit­y to build the Diefenbake­r is expected to set off a new round of furious lobbying by Canada’s three major shipyards: Seaspan, Halifaxbas­ed Irving Shipbuildi­ng and Quebec City’s Chantier Davie.

The three are bitter rivals and have not spared any expense fighting each other for work over the past decade.

“We are pleased to see Canada exploring a domestical­ly built polar icebreaker,” Seaspan vicepresid­ent Amy MacLeod said in an email.

“Seaspan Shipyards was purpose-built to deliver the entire non-combat (shipbuildi­ng) program, including polar. We have the infrastruc­ture, highly skilled team and supply chain in place today to deliver a world-class polar icebreaker on the government’s timeline.”

Seaspan was tapped in 2011 to build the Diefenbake­r as part of a larger order that also included four science vessels for the coast guard and two navy supply ships, but it was removed from the Vancouver shipyard’s order book and replaced with 16 smaller multipurpo­se vessels in May.

Davie is expected to figure as Seaspan’s main rival.

 ?? JONATHAN HAYWARD THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? The Canadian Coast Guard icebreaker Louis S. St-Laurent has been in operation since 1969.
JONATHAN HAYWARD THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO The Canadian Coast Guard icebreaker Louis S. St-Laurent has been in operation since 1969.

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