Sunday, December 15, 2024

Premiers push Ottawa to build Northern infrastructure after Arctic foreign policy

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OTTAWA — Canada’s Northern premiers are pitching the federal government to dip into its defence budget as a way to bolster Arctic infrastructure and help meet the NATO spending target in the process.

The calls come after Canada released its new Arctic foreign policy earlier this month, which committed to promoting investment in a wide range of sectors — including critical mineral development, transportation and energy — but didn’t specifically make funding commitments in those areas.

The policy, Ottawa says, complements the updated defence policy released last April, which focused heavily on the Arctic, promising $218 million over 20 years to build and operate “support hubs” across the North.

Those hubs will come with infrastructure upgrades for communities that include improved communications, water and power facilities.

While the locations of the hubs have yet to be determined — save perhaps for Inuvik, N.W.T., where the Defence Department is upgrading the local airport as part of its Norad modernization — the Northern premiers argue there are other areas where infrastructure investment can be tied to defence spending.

“I’ve talked many times to the federal government about infrastructure and the possibility of including that as defence spending,” said Northwest Territories Premier R.J. Simpson in an interview.

Among the more ambitious pitches he’s made is to build road infrastructure to help mine and move the territory’s critical minerals.

The territory is home to one of the world’s largest tungsten deposits outside of China. Its high melting point, density and strength make tungsten a key component in armour-piercing ammunition, armour plating and aviation components.

It would also help bolster the economy of the Northwest Territories, where mining and oil and gas extraction represented almost one-fifth of the GDP in 2023.

“In the territory, we have an abundance of critical minerals. And ensuring that we have the infrastructure to access those is important,” Simpson said.

“A lot of those critical minerals are used for defence purposes.”

Simpson said he hasn’t heard an official response one way or the other, but did note NATO has specific criteria for what counts as defence spending.

All 32 NATO allies have agreed to spend the equivalent of at least two per cent of their GDP on defence each year. Canada’s spending is projected at 1.37 per cent this year, and it does not plan to meet the target until at least 2032.

Anessa Kimball, a professor at Université Laval who has written about NATO’s spending targets, said Canada could likely make the case that critical minerals and infrastructure are part of its defence spending.

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