Canada’s research capacity in the North lags other countries

We can’t rely on American, Chinese, or Norwegian research to procure the scientific foundation on which to base the sustainable development of our North.
The trans-sectoral ArcticNet Network of Centres of Excellence and the research icebreaker CCGS Amundsen, pictured, have helped to revitalize Canada’s lacklustre research effort in the North by defragmenting the academic research community and partnering it with Inuit and the private and public sectors, say ArcticNet's Leah Braithwaite and Louis Fortier.
The changing Arctic is a new frontier of scientific discovery, industrial development, and socio-economic innovation. From China’s plan for a Polar Silk Road to Norway’s Nansen Legacy program on the Barents Sea and adjacent Arctic basin; from Russia’s intense extraction of its Arctic resource...

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