Following a Call for Proposals issued on February 20, 2009 and subsequent review process, the following initial set of projects has been selected for federal government funding under the $85 million Arctic Research Infrastructure Fund. Additional projects will be announced.
*****Arctic Health Research Network, Northwest Territories
Project Lead: Arctic Health Research Network, Northwest Territories
Location: Yellowknife, Northwest Territories
* [up to $1,605,670]
The Arctic Health Research Network, Northwest Territories (AHRN NT) was established in 2005. Funding will increase public health research facility space and create a training centre in Yellowknife focusing on community-based methods, data collection, and analysis for public health research.
Arctic Migratory Bird Research Network
Project Lead: Environment Canada
Locations: Nunavut and Northwest Territories
* [up to $748,555]
Over the past 35 years, a network of field stations has been developed that spans a number of key migratory bird breeding sites, from Hudson Bay in the southeast to Cornwalis Island in the Central Arctic and the Mackenzie Delta in the west. Funding will allow eight facilities to improve health, safety and environmental standards, electrical and telecommunication capacity, and enhance existing infrastructure to better support scientific research.
Aurora Research Institute
Project Lead: Aurora College
Location: Inuvik, Northwest Territories
* [up to $11,000,000]
In operation since 1964, the Aurora Research Institute (ARI) supplies logistics and licensing support to researchers in the Western Arctic region. ARI’s mandate is to improve the quality of life for NWT residents by applying scientific, technological, and indigenous knowledge to solve northern problems and advance social and economic goals. To continue to meet this mandate, ARI’s current research facility must be replaced. Funding will go towards the construction of a new facility with upgraded laboratory and office space.
Centre d'études nordiques (CEN) - SAON Network
Project Lead: Université Laval
Locations: Nunavik Territory, Québec and Nunavut
* [up to $8,285,613]
The CEN network of research stations began in 1968. The network is in the eastern Arctic from northern Québec to the far northern limit of the High Arctic in Nunavut. The CEN is a leading centre of excellence for the study of high latitude climate, landscapes, aquatic environments, vegetation and wildlife. Funding will allow for environmental and safety upgrades to accommodations, laboratory, and storage space at all eight facilities to ensure secure working conditions, reduce environmental footprints and improve energy efficiency. Additional funds will be used to add on a new Community Science Training Centre to facilitate research planning, training and knowledge exchange with the international, national and local communities at the Whapmagoostui research station.
Churchill Northern Studies Centre
Project Lead: Churchill Northern Studies Centre
Location: Churchill, Manitoba
* [up to $11,000,000]
The Churchill Northern Studies Centre (CNSC) is a non-profit research and education facility 23 km east of Churchill. Established in 1976, CNSC provides meals and accommodation, laboratory space, transportation, equipment and storage services to researchers working in the biological, physical, and social sciences. The facility is used by many academic and government agencies and serves as a key regional logistics hub for Canada’s Sub-Arctic. Funding will allow for upgrades to two existing facilities that date to 1984 and 1976, as well as a new Northern Studies Centre that will be a showcase for the construction of highly efficient, green buildings in Canada’s North.
H. S. Bostock Geological Core Library
Project Lead: Yukon Geological Survey
Location: Whitehorse, Yukon
* [up to $3,885,000]
Run by the Yukon Geological Survey (YGS), the H.S. Bostock Core Library is a facility that supports geoscience research in the Yukon. The facility supports mineral exploration in Yukon and provides information to enable stewardship and sustainable development of the Territory’s energy, mineral, and land resources. Built in 1972, the facility houses the Yukon rock sample collection and over 120,000 metres of diamond drill core donated by industry or recovered from field sites by the YGS. These cores are used by Territorial, Provincial, Federal and University-based geoscientists and other international geological surveys. The Library has nearly reached its capacity. Funding will allow for renovations and upgrades to provide increased secure storage for current and future specimens as well as for the storage of equipment required for geological field research.
Health Canada Radiological Monitoring Network
Project Lead: Health Canada
Locations: Nunavut and Northwest Territories
* [up to $1,440,000]
Health Canada operates an extensive radiological monitoring network in the North, which supports the Government of Canada’s obligations under the Federal Nuclear Emergency Plan and the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty (CTBT), a United Nations agency. The information gathered from this network contributes to a more thorough understanding of the major sources and pathways of airborne contaminants in the Arctic. Funding will allow for upgrades to expand four separate monitoring sites in Nunavut and the Northwest Territories (Alert, Resolute Bay, Iqaluit and Yellowknife).
kANGIDLUASUk Base Camp
Project Lead: Nunatsiavut Government
Location: Saglek Bay, Nunatsiavut Territory, Newfoundland and Labrador
* [up to $2,765,638]
Since 2006, the Nunatsiavut Government and Parks Canada have operated kANGIDLUASUk – an Inuit-managed base camp in Saglek Bay on Inuit-owned land at the southern boundary of the Torngat Mountains National Park. Over the past number of years, this area has been experiencing an increase in the number of field research requests. This funding will allow for kANGIDLUASUk to be upgraded with the addition of a kitchen, dining facilities, sleeping quarters and a separate building for a laboratory. The buildings will use green technologies for heating and electricity, with appropriate fuel containment facilities.
Kluane Lake Research Station
Project Lead: Arctic Institute of North America (at the University of Calgary)
Location: Kluane, Yukon
* [up to $3,393,000]
The Kluane Lake Research Station, built in 1961, is at the southern tip of Kluane Lake. For nearly 50 years the facility has supported a wide variety of research ranging from glaciology, geomorphology, geology, geography, ecology, botany, zoology, hydrology, limnology, climatology, high-altitude physiology, anthropology, and archaeology. The station has been an anchor for science in this region with a long tradition of fostering major interdisciplinary science programs. Funding will allow for the renovation and upgrading of several existing buildings with increased accommodation, storage, green energy capacities (e.g. wind and solar), as well as laboratory space at both the base site and associated field sites. Improvements will bring the buildings and services up to modern standards and better meet increased needs.
Labrador Institute and Nunatsiavut Research Centre
Project Lead: Memorial University and Nunatsiavut Government
Locations: North West River, Newfoundland and Labrador, and Nain, Nunatsiavut Territory of Newfoundland and Labrador
* [up to $2,499,000]
This project will renovate existing research facilities in two communities in Labrador. The first, the North West River Learning Centre, serves a diverse Aboriginal and Northern population in central Labrador’s boreal region. The facility will be a hub for research in Labrador, supporting local research activities and providing logistical services to satellite facilities in other communities throughout Labrador. The second, the Nunatsiavut Research Centre, serves Inuit in Nunatsiavut, ranging from north of Lake Melville to the northern tip of the Torngat Mountains. The organization facilitates scientific research in the areas of climate change, environmental sustainability, resource production, alternative energy, population monitoring, contaminants, cultural history, health, education, Arctic sovereignty and language retention. Funding will allow for an increase in accommodations, lab space, storage, classrooms, meeting rooms, and libraries.
Nunavik Research Centre
Project Lead: Makivik Corporation
Location: Kuujjuaq, Nunavik Territory, Québec
* [up to $4,910,159]
The Nunavik Research Centre is operated by Makivik Corporation, a non-profit organization created under the James Bay and Northern Québec Agreement, which represents the interests of the Inuit of Nunavik. Since 1977, this facility has focused on climate change, contaminants and wildlife parasites research for Inuit in the region. The Centre also provides logistics support to visiting scientific partners. The existing facility was built as a weather observatory in the 1940s and can no longer be upgraded. Funding will allow for the construction of a new multi-purpose building including laboratories, offices, library, storage, work space and a garage. The new structure will be more energy efficient, reducing heating and maintenance costs as well as disruptions to research work caused by frequent repairs.
Old Crow Research Facility
Project Lead: Vuntut Gwitchin Government
Location: Old Crow, Yukon
* [up to $2,044,950]
The Vuntut Gwitchin fly-in community of Old Crow in the Yukon has long been welcoming researchers and visitors to its traditional territory since the 1920s. The facility has a significant collection of artefacts, fossils, and oral and recorded data that is of global importance. In recent years, the demand from many universities across North America to conduct research in or near Old Crow has increased. Funding will allow the community of Old Crow to continue hosting researchers by renovating and expanding a small facility. The upgraded facility will also house the Old Crow Paleontological collection for academic and government researchers. Renovations will allow expanded space to house the science logistics equipment of various users including: academics, the Vuntut Gwitchin Government’s Natural Resource Department and Parks Canada.
Yukon College
Project Lead: Yukon College
Location: Whitehorse, Yukon
[up to $2,502,000]
Since 1991, the Northern Research Institute at Yukon College has been facilitating research in the territory. It is a multidisciplinary research environment, where applied, pure, social science and humanities can work together in answering questions about the North’s environment, people and structures. Yukon College, through the Northern Research Institute, administers a number of research programs focused in various areas including climate change, social economy, cold climate innovations and biodiversity. The growth of these programs is limited by current facilities. Funding will allow Yukon College to renovate existing research offices and build heated and unheated storage facilities within a fenced compound. This project will provide enhancements to the College's research infrastructure to better serve its current needs, as well as meet future demands.
Yukon Forestry
Project Lead: Government of Yukon
Location: Whitehorse, Yukon
* [up to $1,596,637]
*Projects will be monitored through regular due diligence and reporting. They will be allocated funding in a phased approach, up to the total recommended to ensure that projects are proceeding as expected.