:
I call this meeting to order.
Welcome to meeting number 88 of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Science and Research.
We have some concerns about audio feedback. Before I begin, I'd like all members and other in-person participants to consult the cards on the table for guidelines to prevent audio feedback incidents. We have to protect the hearing of interpreters. Only use an approved black earpiece. When you're not using your earpiece, please put it on the sticker provided on your table.
Thank you for your co-operation.
Today's meeting is in a hybrid format.
Before speaking, please wait until I recognize you by name.
For members in the room, please raise your hand if you wish to speak. For members on Zoom, please use the “raise hand” function. The clerk and I will manage the speaking order as best we can, and we appreciate your understanding in this regard.
As a reminder, all comments should be addressed through the chair.
Before we start with the opening speeches—
Go ahead, Monsieur Blanchette-Joncas.
:
Do we have unanimous consent to allow those additional ones who were misinformed to submit documents that will be accepted?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
The Chair: That's great. Thank you very much.
Now we'll move on to opening statements.
Pursuant to Standing Order 108(3)(i) and the motion adopted by the committee on Tuesday, January 31, 2023, the committee resumes its study of science and research in Canada's Arctic in relation to climate change.
It's now my pleasure to welcome to the committee, from the National Research Council of Canada, Anne Barker, director, Arctic and northern challenge program, and Dr. Shannon Quinn, secretary-general.
From the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, we have Dr. Ted Hewitt, president, and Dr. Sylvie Lamoureux, vice-president, research.
You have up to five minutes for your opening remarks, after which we will proceed with rounds of questions.
Ms. Barker, I invite you to make an opening statement of up to five minutes.
:
Madam Chair, thank you for inviting me to speak with you today about the National Research Council of Canada, or NRC, as part of this committee’s study on science and research in Canada’s Arctic in relation to climate change.
[English]
We would like to begin by acknowledging that the research activities of the National Research Council take place on the traditional unceded territories of many first nations, Inuit and Métis people. Today we are appearing here in Ottawa on unceded Algonquin Anishinabe territory.
We are inspired by the relationship that the Algonquin Anishinabe have with water, which is critically impacted by climate change. We look to the water as a means of understanding climate change, as its changes in state inform us in that regard.
[Translation]
We recognize our privilege to be able to conduct research and drive innovation on these lands. That is why we want to pay respect to Canada’s indigenous peoples.
[English]
My name is Shannon Quinn. I'm the secretary-general of the National Research Council. In this capacity, I am responsible for advancing the Government of Canada's science, research and innovation agenda.
I'll tell you a few things about the NRC as a whole.
[Translation]
The NRC is one of the largest federal research organizations. It advances scientific and technical knowledge, supports business innovation and provides science-based policy solutions. The NRC’s work is undertaken at facilities nationwide, and collaborations occur at other locations across Canada.
The NRC’s scientists, engineers and business experts partner with a broad range of organizations, including governments, universities, colleges and Canadian industry. That way, scientific and technical achievements are not just confined to a lab; they find an application on the market.
[English]
The NRC's current strategic priorities, as reflected in our recently released strategic plan, are to advance research and innovation for the benefit of Canada. These areas —importantly, for the purposes of this committee—include climate change and sustainability, health and biomanufacturing, digital and quantum technologies and foundational research, primarily in the areas of astronomy and metrology.
I now turn to my colleague Dr. Anne Barker, director of the Arctic and northern challenge program, who will use the remainder of our opening remarks to speak specifically about Arctic research.
:
Thank you for the opportunity to participate.
The creation of the NRC's Arctic and northern challenge program stemmed from a ministerial direction in 2018 to create a research program on the north.
Through extensive northern engagement, this program has been aligned with the needs of northerners—and endorsed by them—throughout its design, launch and delivery.
Now in year three, the program's vision, guided by northerners, is that the daily lives of Arctic and northern peoples are improved through applied technology and innovation.
Its objectives are that Arctic and northern peoples participate in the design, governance, delivery and dissemination of applied research to address challenges identified by them; and that northern research and development capacity is built and increased to solve pressing issues confronting northerners.
[Translation]
The NRC is investing over $22 million over seven years in its Collaborative Science, Technology and Innovation Program, as part of the Challenge Program. NRC researchers and research facilities will therefore be able to partner with northern territorial and indigenous governments, research institutions and industry. These projects will enable a sustainable economy and support a healthy future for Arctic and northern peoples within thematic research areas of housing, health, food and water.
[English]
We recognize that having more diverse teams leads to better research results, with complementary competencies coming together for added value in research. NRC recognized early on that funding alone was not sufficient to enable these research partnerships. Rather, we needed to also consider broad eligibility instead of a narrow definition of who can conduct research; changes to support northerners' participation in research development; flexibility in funding approaches; and adapting to the realities of undertaking research in the north, such as high travel costs, the need for honoraria for elders, translation and Wi-Fi costs, data storage capabilities, and development of local training opportunities.
In addition, in alignment with the Truth and Reconciliation Commission's call to action 57—
:
Thank you for the opportunity to address the committee, Madam Chair, as president of the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council—or SSHRC, as we call it—and as chair of the steering committee for the tri-agency institutional programs secretariat, both of which work closely with the other federal research funding agencies on various Arctic-related research initiatives.
[Translation]
As you know, communities across northern Canada, many of which are indigenous, are among the most vulnerable to climate change. They are witnessing first-hand the devastating impacts a changing climate is having across Arctic ecosystems, livelihoods, health, indigenous culture and a traditional way of life that goes back several generations.
This reality reinforces the importance of research, including interdisciplinary work, to address the complex challenges faced in the Arctic. It also underscores the necessity for indigenous-led research to respond to locally defined research priorities.
[English]
SSHRC's current Arctic research initiatives build on the success of our past investments, such as those in ArcticNet and Sentinel North. These projects bring together scientists from various disciplines, with partners from northern communities, government agencies and the private sector, as well as international partners, to study the impacts of climate change in the Canadian north.
Through the tri-agency new frontiers in research fund, we are also aligned with the Scandinavian research councils' collective NordForsk's international research initiative on sustainable development of the Arctic to further promote large-scale interdisciplinary and collaborative research in the region. This international partnership includes Canada, the United States and several Nordic European countries.
[Translation]
Furthermore, through the New Frontiers and Research Fund, SSHRC will administer $20 million over four years to create new knowledge for sustainable development in the Arctic. It will expand our understanding of how best to address complex climate change impacting Canada’s north.
As a condition of joining the program, SSHRC stipulated that indigenous communities must be invited to participate in the design, development and leadership of any project deemed eligible for funding.
[English]
SSHRC also supports Arctic-related research through its core funding on such topics as climate change adaptation and mitigation, energy and resources, sustainable development, geopolitics, food security and many other areas. Between 2018 and mid-2023, SSHRC awarded over $67 million in funding to support northern research, including on Arctic-related topics. These grants are administered at post-secondary research institutions across Canada, but notably at Yukon University, Nunavut Arctic College and Aurora College in the Northwest Territories.
[Translation]
As I mentioned, SSHRC understands that indigenous rights to self-determination, as they relate Arctic research, include leadership of, and governance over, research conducted in their communities. This commitment is reinforced through the Strengthening Indigenous Research Capacity initiative, a priority of the Canada Research Coordinating Committee. It affirms indigenous knowledge systems, approaches to learning and means of sharing knowledge.
We developed a new category of funding eligibility for indigenous not-for-profit organizations as part of our response to Call to Action 65 of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission Report.
[English]
There are currently 18 eligible indigenous institutions in this category. These include the Dechinta Centre for Research and Learning, the Inuvialuit Regional Corporation in the Northwest Territories and the Qaujigiartiit Health Research Centre in Nunavut.
Madam Chair, we're determined that northern researchers and communities, and the institutions that serve them, will play a central role in Arctic research, given the direct impacts climate change has on them.
[Translation]
I would be pleased to provide further insights into our Arctic-related research activities during the question and answer period.
Thank you.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
I wanted to ask Ms. Quinn or Ms. Barker a question.
I was just looking at one grant that was received from Queen's University. You don't have to talk specifically about that one, but how do these work, generally?
Polar Knowledge Canada is the organization. The program name is the northern science and technology program. The location is Kingston, Ontario. That grant is $450,000 for three years.
How does that work? You don't have to speak specifically about the one I just mentioned, but do the researchers do the research from Kingston? Do they work with the POLAR group? How does that work? How do the mechanics of all this work?
:
Yes. However, grants and contributions have many different types of terms and conditions.
Within the National Research Council and our Arctic and northern challenge program, the direction really comes from northerners. You could have an organization, like Queen's or another university, that may be the project lead. Generally, that is often due to capacity limitations in the north, so a northern organization may choose to have a university partner, for example, within our programs that helps administer the research, moves the funds and advances the research.
In other cases, it could be a northern-led organization. We have a number of projects, for example, with the NNC, the Nunavut Nukkiksautiit Corporation, which is a Nunavut renewable energy company in the north. It is the lead applicant, but it has partnered with a southern-based university to support it in its research.
It's really on a case-by-case basis, depending on the capabilities, competencies and capacity.
:
I just have one other question, and anybody can grab it.
We've heard from a lot of people who have talked about the coordination of efforts in the Arctic, and I think that's a fair question, a fair request.
If you go through the dollars that have been allocated up there, there are a lot of dollars spent studying caribou, which is important, and there are a lot of dollars spent in different regions studying shorelines, water and ice, and not just in one spot; obviously, it's a massive area. How's all that coordinated? How do you prevent duplication? How do we do that?
Is there one person you can go to, one place, and they say, yes, we have it? Is there a machine behind the scenes that's making all this work?
:
Thank you so much, Chair.
Thank you to all our witnesses for your testimony so far.
Ms. Barker, you talked about the vision specifically that you have in terms of the Arctic and northern challenge program, and you referenced that it would be guided by northerners, the daily lives of Arctic and northern people, and it would be to ensure that their lives were improved through applied technology and innovation. You mentioned some specific areas you were looking at, such as housing, health, food and water.
Could you give us some practical examples of some research that's been funded that has shown some practical recommendations for improvement and perhaps where these have actually been implemented?
I will say that, as mentioned, this is only year three of a seven-year-long research program, so our projects are still under way. Our first suite of projects is shortly coming to an end.
These are projects that were developed under the Canada-Inuit Nunangat-United Kingdom research programme, which is a collaboration with United Kingdom Research and Innovation, Polar Knowledge Canada, Parks Canada, Fonds de recherche du Québec and Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami.
Some of those projects.... For example, there's the Sikuttiaq project. Some of you may be aware of SmartICE. This project is looking at the effects of climate change on hunting routes over sea ice. It's partnering remote sensing with drone technology as well as on-ice evaluation of ice conditions to create safer ice conditions and safe passage for northerners as they are getting out onto the ice and onto the land. Again, all of this comes back into an application, with the data being owned and operated by SmartICE offices.
We have other projects. I mentioned working with NNC, the Nunavut renewable energy corporation. That is a project looking at very small-scale renewable energy technologies specifically for hunting cabins. Hunting cabins in the north are an essential part of livelihoods and a way of life, but they are often exempt from funding availability because they're not a primary residence. This project is looking at very small-scale hydrokinetic opportunities—wind, solar, as well as some retrofits—for hunting and what that could look like.
Similarly, we have projects looking at search and rescue. As climate change decreases sea ice conditions, we may see more search and rescue requirements. That is partnering the Canadian military and the Coast Guard with regional search and rescue auxiliary members and Rangers. They are coming together for stronger collaboration and coordination in the event that there are more search and rescue considerations.
We have other projects looking at the decreasing air quality, whether that's from wildfires, and what that does on a very engineering scale to your ventilation and your indoor air quality in homes, and what that looks like.
We're also working with the hamlet of Tuktoyaktuk in looking at planning. As we all know, that community is very much struggling with the effects of climate change. What do we do from a planning perspective for housing infrastructure?
These are the types of projects we have under way at the moment. We're looking forward to doing more starting in the coming years.
In addition to our internal processes within NRC, we have a mid-program review to see how things are moving along.
We're also doing a bit of a pilot project right now with Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami. For that CINUK program I mentioned, those projects will be coming to an end.
We also want to do an evaluation by the people that this research is supposed to be developed with and carried out with. What do they think of it? How did we do? Where can we improve?
We also have a program advisory committee made up of northern representation, including territorial science advisers and northern industry, to help us on our way. We meet twice a year with them to help correct our course and look at how things worked or did not work. All of that will be part of the process for the program.
:
Thank you all for being here today.
I'm going to turn to Dr. Hewitt.
SSHRC is one of the funding agencies, and you touched on the coordination aspect of that. It's not really an inherent thing; it happens organically through your funding processes.
You also mentioned a couple of other agencies or groups that may provide more of that coordination. I'm just wondering what part you play in them. One is ArcticNet, which, from what I understand, is a big network of people working in centres of excellence across the country and coordinating around the world.
What kind of role does SSHRC play in ArcticNet? Perhaps you could comment on ArcticNet and its role in coordinating Arctic research specifically about climate change, which is what we're talking about here today.
:
The most important thing to remember is that we are funders of research that is developed almost exclusively by the individuals who are doing the research.
Big projects like that are themselves well coordinated. They've been put together, in some cases, over years. They've applied for funding either from us at SSHRC or through tri-agency mechanisms like the Canada first research excellence fund, and then they're adjudicated again by peer review. This is a way we help ensure there isn't overlap and that projects are undertaking the research they're intended to do.
We've also started to work more internationally on projects that will meet or speak to international priorities, which is the case with the competition I mentioned earlier. It's being organized by NordForsk, which is the representative body of the research funding councils of the Nordic countries. Canada will be joining that, as we were invited to do. There will be specific questions and objectives, as I recall, from the NordForsk initiative that countries will be looking to put forward. We can provide you with some more information on that.
Our role is primarily as a funder of projects developed by the researchers themselves and, more and more, by researchers in northern communities, which is our objective overall. That's how we work as a funder.
There are the SSHRC-specific programs and also the programs through the TIPS, the tri-agency institutional programs. Some of these are quite large.
As an example, in 2022 the Canada first research excellence fund awarded the Qanittaq clean Arctic shipping initiative over $91 million. It is a partnership between Memorial University of Newfoundland and the University of Ottawa, but there's a host of other partners, so it's a very large, unique partnership. The Inuit Circumpolar Council was part of the co-development of that. That's, I think, a shift that we've seen in the past 10 or15 years, with co-development of applications, co-construction of knowledge and co-publication. All of that is happening much closer together. That's one example.
In ArcticNet, we have nine SSHRC-funded Canada research chairs whose work is on the north. There are three NSERC-funded CERCs—Canada excellence research chairs—and Canada 150 research chairs. In the partnership in insight grants, we have some projects in French, which are on intercultural mediation and ontological conflicts in justice in Nunavik. There's also a scoping and “storying“ project on food governance in Inuit Nunangat. There's a whole range of topics.
If you'd like, we can send you more information on these particular projects, on which ones are partnerships and the types of partners that are there.
I would just like to add with regard to NordForsk that when it seemed that we would be invited to join—because we had to be invited to join—the first thing the team did was reach out to ITK. This project is being led by a foreign organization, but we really want to work within our zone of control, to make sure to bring in ITK as quickly as possible and to see how we could influence the call that was eventually launched for this funding opportunity but, really, to work closely together. That's very important as well, because the relationship with indigenous partners is not necessarily the same when we work with some of our international partners, so I think it's an important role that the—
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
Let me start by thanking our witnesses for being here today.
It's an interesting study. As members of Parliament, some of us, like me, have not been privy to a lot of experience in the Arctic. It's fascinating to hear what you're saying.
Dr. Barker, rather than have you send something in writing, I will let you continue what you were saying. You spoke about the pressing issues affecting northerners and the research program in the north with technology, innovation and research partnerships.
The question you were trying to answer was what research and technologies would be most beneficial to improve the lives of those living in Canada's Arctic. I'm going to let you continue. You didn't have a chance to finish this. Rather than have you send it in a brief, we can actually hear it here today.
:
I would have to answer anecdotally, but I've been around for a while.
This is for SSHRC, by the way, not for NSERC. I'll let Dr. Adem answer for NSERC.
I would say that it has increased steadily, in part because of our own policies, which have encouraged greater participation of indigenous communities and northern communities in research projects that are submitted to us. The range is just phenomenal—everything from legal and jurisdictional issues to language retention to community development.
There's a wonderful project we funded in Labrador, of $2.5 million, looking at the impact of the forced migration of thousands of residents of that area, I believe starting in the 1930s and 1940s, who were absolutely spread to the wind throughout Labrador. The project was designed to help reconnect families that had been broken and to work toward restoring livelihoods, cultural products and goods, education and so forth. It's very well documented, and I'd love to share that.
:
Thank you very much. Welcome back.
It's now my pleasure to welcome our second panel of witnesses.
From Polar Environment Atmospheric Research Laboratory, we have Dr. Kimberly Strong, professor of physics at the University of Toronto.
From Polar Knowledge Canada, we have Andrew Applejohn, executive director, programs, and Dr. David Hik, chief scientist.
We give you up to five minutes for opening remarks, after which we'll proceed with rounds of questions.
Dr. Strong, I invite you to make an opening statement of up to five minutes.
I thank the committee for undertaking this study and for inviting me to speak to you about science and research needs in Canada's Arctic.
My name is Kimberly Strong. I'm a professor and the chair of the department of physics at the University of Toronto. I'm also an atmospheric scientist and the principal investigator of PEARL, the Polar Environment Atmospheric Research Laboratory. My group has been doing research at this location for 25 years.
I'm speaking on behalf of the PEARL science team, which includes colleagues from nine universities. We also have many partners across Canada and internationally, and we work closely with Environment and Climate Change Canada and the Canadian Space Agency. Work at PEARL is conducted under a scientific research licence from the Nunavut Research Institute.
The Arctic remains one of the earth's least understood environments, and yet it is a bellwether for climate change, a receptor for global pollution and a driver for the global climate system. Northern ecosystems, including ice, snow and permafrost; wildlife and vegetation; and marine systems are all linked together by our atmosphere. It contains the air we breathe and the protective ozone layer, it stores greenhouse gases, it's where weather happens, and it transports air pollution and wildfire smoke into the Arctic.
PEARL is a flagship observatory established in 2005 for tracking changes happening in the Arctic atmosphere and for determining the causes and global impacts. PEARL is located at 80° north on Ellesmere Island near the Environment and Climate Change Canada weather station at Eureka, Nunavut. For nearly 20 years, PEARL measurements have provided insight into an array of scientific policy and societal issues that are relevant to Arctic communities, Canada and the world.
PEARL's focus on long-term atmospheric measurements in the very High Arctic differentiates it from the research activities of the Canadian High Arctic Research Station at Cambridge Bay, from ArcticNet, from the Centre for Northern Studies, and the Amundsen icebreaker. We're all complementary in what we do.
PEARL is an important Canadian station in five international observing networks. As the most northerly permanent station for most of these networks and one of only a few in the Arctic, PEARL measurements fill a very large gap in their geographical coverage. PEARL is also a key site for verifying the data from satellite missions, including the upcoming high-altitude aerosols, water vapour and clouds mission, which will be Canada's contribution to NASA's multi-decadal atmosphere observing system.
PEARL offers exceptional educational opportunities and has trained more than 100 students, postdoctoral fellows and technical staff, most of whom are now working in government, academia and industry. Our outreach program has been active in six northern Nunavut communities through school visits, student researcher collaborations, and workshops for teachers.
PEARL is remote and isolated, accessible only by charter aircraft and the annual summer ship visit. The nearest community, Grise Fiord, is more than 400 kilometres to the south by air. PEARL is very different from a normal campus-based lab or facility located in a community.
The December 2023 report of the expert panel on the future of Arctic northern research in Canada highlighted PEARL as a unique and internationally important research facility. The report stated that “even where infrastructure is remote and where there are no nearby communities with which to partner, facilities such as [PEARL] represent critical elements of an effective research system and cannot go overlooked.”
Over the last 18 years, Canada has invested in PEARL infrastructure, operations, science and training. However, this investment is now at risk. PEARL needs stable funding that's attuned to being a unique facility in a unique location. Unfortunately, PEARL does not fit easily into any of Canada's major recurring funding programs. Many of the programs that previously supported PEARL no longer exist, and PEARL's last major grant ended in 2021. PEARL is currently running at a minimal level and will close this year if new funding is not secured soon.
Let me summarize my remarks with reference to the three points being assessed by the committee's study.
Number one, to understand the consequences and impacts of environmental change, we need to track changes over time. We need a long-term strategy for supporting Arctic research in Canada—a strategy that's inclusive of different approaches, including both indigenous and western science; a strategy that encompasses the many different components of the Arctic ecosystem, including the atmosphere, which sometimes gets left out; and a strategy that engages and reflects the needs of local, regional, territorial, national and international partners.
Number two, to fully participate in research, Arctic and northern populations need access to infrastructure, tools and funds. This is true of Arctic research in Canada generally. PEARL is just one example of a facility that's under pressure due to the lack of continuity and sustained operational funding. Establishing research capacity is a huge effort with long lead times. Losing that capacity can happen all too easily. We need sustained funding programs that recognize that research in the Arctic is challenging and expensive, and it should not have a one-size-fits-all model. It should be recognized that not all Arctic research is conducted in communities.
Finally, number three, collaboration with local and indigenous communities is vitally important. However, factors like distance, travel costs and the effort involved in establishing and then sustaining those partnerships present barriers to meaningful collaboration.
This is even more difficult for facilities like PEARL, which don't have the advantage of being located near a community. We need mechanisms to bring together researchers and community members to build co-operative partnerships for long-term and sustainable Arctic research.
Thank you, again, for this opportunity to address the committee.
:
Hello. I'd like to thank the committee for holding this important hearing.
[Translation]
I'm pleased to be here today to provide comments on behalf of Polar Knowledge Canada.
[English]
My name is David Hik. I have served as the chief scientist at Polar Knowledge Canada for the past two and a half years. I am based in Cambridge Bay, or Ikaluktutiak, in Nunavut, at our headquarters in the Canadian High Arctic Research Station. I'm joined today by Andrew Applejohn, who is the executive director of programs.
The questions the committee is addressing in this study are both timely and important. The impacts of climate change in the Arctic are already evident and will have an impact on the rest of the country and the entire world. While the impacts of climate change are drastically affecting Arctic people, wildlife, infrastructure and the environment, the consequences of these changes are reverberating throughout the global climate system, influencing extreme weather, wildfires, the sea level and increases in temperatures, with impacts on communities across Canada. The importance of Arctic research at this time cannot be overstated.
Ensuring that northern and indigenous rights holders, organizations, communities and partners are directly involved in leading science and research relevant to the Arctic is essential for identifying solutions to address the many challenges facing this region.
In October 2007, the Speech from the Throne acknowledged the need to give greater attention to the Arctic by committing to the development of an integrated northern strategy. Included in this approach was the intention to build a world-class research facility in the Arctic to work on the cutting edge of Arctic issues, including climate change, environmental science, food security and resource development.
In 2019, 12 years later, the community of Cambridge Bay and the representatives of Canada and Nunavut marked the official opening of the Canadian High Arctic Research Station, or CHARS. While the primary focus of the CHARS facility is civilian, its infrastructure and strategic Arctic location can also support, when needed, emergency response or security efforts in the region. In fact, the Canadian High Arctic Research Station will be providing operational support for the Canadian Armed Forces' Operation Nanook again this summer.
POLAR's mandate, as established under the Canadian High Arctic Research Station Act, is to undertake and support locally relevant and globally significant knowledge creation. As an organization headquartered in the Canadian north, POLAR is fully engaged with northern communities, governments and organizations to ensure that the work it undertakes respects local priorities and returns meaningful benefits to the north.
POLAR conducts and supports research focused on climate change adaptation, mitigation and innovation by bringing together diverse groups of experts and, importantly, our northern partners. Three focus areas guide our work.
The first objective is ecosystem science, improving our knowledge of dynamic northern terrestrial, freshwater and marine ecosystems within the context of rapid change. Over the past decade, we've obtained detailed baseline information about these ecosystems, including rapidly changing abiotic elements such as permafrost, snow and sea ice.
Our second objective is to increase the understanding of the connections between northern community wellness and environmental health, including aspects of food security, sovereignty and safety. This “one health” approach recognizes that northerners will benefit from a better understanding of how changes in the environment affect the abundance and diversity of country foods, the impact of environmental contaminants, like mercury and microplastics, and the impact of diseases on northern wildlife. This is consistently a top priority for northerners.
Our third objective is to advance clean energy and cold climate infrastructure solutions for the unique conditions in the Arctic. For example, northerners have a great interest in cost-effective options for waste and waste water management, alternative and renewable energy solutions and building technologies designed for northern conditions. CHARS supports the testing of clean energy solutions, including energy storage, biofuels and advanced renewable energy technologies by industry, government and academia prior to technology deployment in remote communities.
Polar Knowledge Canada is implementing programs and activities that support our science and technology goals and contribute to building capacity across northern Canada in several different ways. POLAR staff and operating funds are used to conduct research at CHARS in collaboration with researchers from other government departments, academia, communities and other countries. POLAR also provides grants and contributions aligned with our objectives to qualified recipients through open, competitive funding programs. In recent years, these calls have been co-developed with indigenous and northern partners to ensure that their priorities are being addressed.
High-quality Arctic research requires high-quality research infrastructure. POLAR is committed to supporting the development of Canadian research infrastructure that is essential to conduct Arctic research and international collaboration, and is committed as well to advancing respectful engagement with Arctic indigenous peoples.
Why does this matter? Research is critically important to understand the drivers, the societal and environmental responses, and the possible pathways to adapt to these changes.
:
Thank you, Chair. Thank you to our witnesses.
I want to start with Dr. Strong.
I was able to get up to PEARL in 2019. I saw the research going on there and the number of universities that are involved, the University of Toronto being the lead of nine, as I think you mentioned.
It seems like PEARL has gone from NSERC grant to NSERC grant. It is doing longitudinal studies that are giving us changes over time in the atmosphere, now picking up on forest fire implications, looking at droughts and floods and atmospheric conditions that are changing in terms of moisture in the atmosphere. It is really important work that seems to be reliant on short-term funding, and now you're in a precarious situation.
What's your current ask to try to keep the doors open?
:
With PEARL, we really got started back in 2003, 2004 and 2005, when we got funding from the Canada Foundation for Innovation. That allowed us to install the equipment at existing Environment and Climate Change Canada buildings and then bring up some containers and set up two other facilities. We have three facilities at Eureka. It was the CFI that really enabled that at the beginning.
We then got six years of funding from the Canadian Foundation for Climate and Atmospheric Sciences, which no longer exists. That gave us stable funding for six years and enabled us to keep operations going and do the science.
There was a gap for about a year or so, and then we were very fortunate to get funding under the NSERC climate change and atmosphere research program, or CCAR, which was a one-off. There were seven lucky winners, and we got funding from that, which we were able to stretch out to 2021, when, because of the COVID pandemic, our expenses went down and we weren't able to travel up so far.
We also got funding from the International Polar Year in 2007 and 2008, and some funding from the Arctic research infrastructure fund.
Those were five of the big funding programs, several of which don't exist any more: CFCAS, CCAR and IPY don't exist any more.
We've also received funding—regular funding—from the Canadian Space Agency, because we do validation of satellite data. They've been a very valuable funding partner. Also, Environment and Climate Change Canada, because we're working at their facility, helps with some of the power costs, which is not an eligible expense under NSERC and other programs.
Over the last 20 years, we've written many proposals. They have not all been successful, but enough have been. The challenge is that every funding program has its own requirements, and for those that require you to have community engagement, it's very hard to do that where we are.
Our expenses are high. We try to piggyback on Environment and Climate Change Canada's monthly produce charters that bring food up to the station, but if we were to charter our own flights a couple of times a year, they're more than $50,000 a pop. Then, to have someone on site, staying at the station, which is the only place—there's no community there; it's just the weather station—costs over $450 a day for food and accommodation. When you send up half a dozen students for a few weeks, the costs add up.
Having programs that recognize the costs of being in such a remote location is really quite critical.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
I welcome the witnesses and thank them for being with us for this second hour of study.
Mr. Hik, the organization you represent plays a very important role. According to the organization's website, “Polar Knowledge Canada is responsible for … strengthening Canadian leadership in polar science and technology, and promoting the development and distribution of knowledge of other circumpolar regions, including Antarctica”.
Your colleague Anne Barker, from the National Research Council of Canada, who is also director of the Arctic and northern challenge program, said that Canada had previously been a world leader in northern research, but that it was no longer. I'd like to know why you think that is.
:
Thank you for the question, Madam Chair.
I might not entirely agree with my colleague Anne. We work together on a number of programs. I think it's important to recognize that we can't be leaders in absolutely everything, and there are many countries that have expertise that's very complementary and overlaps with Canadian expertise. It's a relatively small science community in the Arctic, and we all work closely together.
Investments in the last 20 years through ArcticNet, through the International Polar Year— the last International Polar Year—and through a number of other programs have really built a capacity for the next generation of Arctic science in Canada. I think what's important to realize is that sometimes it's not so much what we do but how we go about doing it, and it's the way we're working with putting the priority on ensuring that indigenous and northern Canadians, who should be leading that work, are involved. That has taken a little time.
When I meet with international colleagues, I think that in many respects they look at Canada with a bit of envy that we've managed to advance on certain issues. On technical issues, there are other countries that sometimes have perhaps more expertise or capabilities than we have, but I think we are world leaders in many ways.
Thank you all for being here today.
I'm going to start with Dr. Hik, if only because we go way back to the research that Dr. Hik started on the tundra ecosystems in the southwestern Yukon. He has continued that line until his very new job in the last couple of years.
This study is about research in the Arctic, especially with regard to climate change. The urgency there is because climate change is impacting the Arctic at a much greater speed than it is us in temperate or tropical latitudes.
You mentioned things like ice extent and permafrost. Some of the most important research—and it may not be the sexiest—include those long-term monitoring datasets that tackle those questions. How can we fix something that we don't know about?
I'll ask Dr. Strong about this as well, but can you talk about the importance of long-term data sets of 10, 20, 30 or more years and how priceless they are when it comes to understanding our world? I'm wondering if you could comment on that.
:
I certainly agree with what David said. Long-term measurements are the lifeblood of understanding what's happening in the Arctic. We've recorded some long-term datasets. I started doing measurements in the spring of 1999. This is the 25th anniversary of measurements of ozone and some gases and of ozone depletion. As a result of those records, we were able to see from year to year a lot of variability in the stratospheric ozone, which protects us from harmful UV. The years when we had very low ozone levels, in 2011 and 2020, were really there and visible in the record, because we had the long-term baseline.
Similarly, we're also measuring wildfire smoke. We see plumes coming up over Eureka. The fires in the Pacific northwest and B.C. in August 2017 injected record amounts of a number of different pollutants into the atmosphere. They came right over PEARL, and we had these big spikes. Again, they were very obvious compared to the baseline we'd collected over the years.
It's the same thing with aerosols, clouds and other things we're measuring. Because of COVID, which limited our access to PEARL, and funding problems, we now have gaps in some of our data records. Some of the instruments need maintenance, but we no longer have an operator on site year-round. You can't go back, right? We're never going to go back and get the measurements that we didn't get after March 2020 with some of our instruments.
We have some instruments that are still running. Some are automated, and for some we have remote control. We have some campaigns to go up and do things. We used to have an on-site operator year-round who would deal with minor issues, but right now we're not able to do that. We sadly have gaps, and we'd like to ramp back up to where we were.
:
Thank you. I'll provide perhaps two answers.
One, there's an important need to be able to share food in communities. When hunters, harvesters and fishers are out, they bring food back not just for themselves but also for elders and for the community. Traditionally, being able to have community freezers as a focal point for food sharing and food storage over seasons has been relatively easy. With warming, we've needed to look at innovative options and new solutions. We're working very closely with hunter and trapper organizations, wildlife management boards and communities to look at how community freezers could be adapted to warming conditions, with everything from sea cans that are powered by clean energy to ways of preserving or packing and sharing things more efficiently.
Second, we're also working on greenhouse technologies. There's a very high cost and challenge in transporting fresh produce in the north. In the Kitikmeot region alone, three separate greenhouse projects over the last few years are looking at different ways that community-supported growing of foods of interest could be commercially viable in those communities.
Those are both very close to being adapted or adopted by different communities to serve their needs, recognizing that different communities might have different requirements.
:
That's an important question for all of us to think about. How do we ensure that the science policy nexus is something that is readily apparent on what those knowledge mobilization and knowledge-sharing pathways are to make sure that information is shared in a timely way, and also to make sure it's appropriate? There are a number of forums for doing that.
One way we do that is to meet once or twice a year with the hamlets, hunter and trapper organizations, wildlife management boards, Inuit development corporations or organizations in Nunavut and with the other equivalent indigenous organizations in Northwest Territories and Nunavut so that we can share information that we're learning, or that others in the research community are learning, with community members. I think it's important that this be normalized and done on a regular basis. We're invited to those meetings. We make sure we always have someone attending. That provides a mechanism for feedback.
Does that get up to the federal level? We need to find other mechanisms for that, but we need to be able to share things locally, regionally, at the territorial level, at the provincial level in some cases, and also with federal colleagues and with policy-makers.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
Thank you to the witnesses.
My question is for Dr. Strong.
You mentioned today in your testimony that PEARL is running out of money. It's a bit heartbreaking to hear, because PEARL plays such an important role in bringing researchers together in an important facility that is widely regarded as important and crucial to producing knowledge around climate change, the atmosphere, pollutants and how they interact with the environment.
In terms of funding, I know you've had moments in the past and in your history, since being formed in 2005, when you have been financially challenged.
My question for you is twofold. Can you shed some light in terms of helping us understand how you have been funded? Second, what does sustainable long-term funding look like?
:
It comes back to my earlier answer.
The initial equipment was bought with CFI funding. Then we had the six-year project grant from the Canada Foundation for Climate and Atmospheric Sciences, which is an organization that no longer exists. Then we had a six-year grant from the climate change and atmospheric research program at NSERC, which was kind of a follow-on from CFCAS, and that program no longer exists. Those were our two primary science funding programs.
Then, as I mentioned, we had some funding from International Polar Year and from the Arctic research infrastructure fund. We've had regular small amounts of money from the Canadian Space Agency that have helped, and some support from Environment and Climate Change Canada.
We've also had funding from NSERC. An NSERC CREATE training program in Arctic atmospheric science funded us for six years, from 2010 to 2016, and that really funded students. We ran six Arctic summer schools as a part of that. That wasn't supporting the lab per se, but it was supporting the students who were doing some of the research at the lab. At the summer schools, we brought in Inuit and other northern representatives to come and talk to the students, and that was very enlightening for them.
Looking forward, we need programs that will cover the operational expenses of working in the Arctic, which is different from working at a university lab down south; that recognize the costs of transport, travel and on-site accommodations; and that can fund the staff that we need. It's that kind of operational funding.
We don't.... We are always looking for programs to apply to, but many of them have different requirements, and it can be hard to meet the criteria. None of them are quite like the CFCAS and the CCAR funding that we had in the past.
:
There are challenges having a federal agency headquartered in Cambridge Bay on an Arctic island, and there are lots of challenges that go along with operating there.
We have staff in Yukon, Whitehorse, Yellowknife, Rankin Inlet and Iqaluit in the north. We also have staff across Canada, working not just in the national capital region but in other locations as well, often co-located with other federal departments. We have staff in the Department of Fisheries and Oceans, in universities and in wildlife health laboratories, and we're able to leverage those relationships.
We also have an ear on the ground, if you will, with organizations and with people in other communities very directly by having staff who are not just concentrated in Cambridge Bay in the north but located in other communities. That's at the research scientist level, at the staff level and at the executive level as well.
:
Thank you very much to our witnesses—Dr. Kimberly Strong, Andrew Applejohn and Dr. David Hik—for your testimony and participation in relation to our study of science and research in Canada's Arctic in relation to climate change. You may submit additional information through the clerk. Please see the clerk for any questions.
Again, we thank you. It was fascinating testimony today.
Before we adjourn, I want to give a brief reminder to members that at Thursday's meeting we will continue our study on science and research in Canada's Arctic in relation to climate change for one hour. Then we will resume consideration of the draft report for the study of the integration of indigenous traditional knowledge and science in government policy development.
We will also consider the travel budget proposal that was shared with members yesterday. It came out to your P9s, I believe, around 5:00 p.m. It's very detailed. I would congratulate the clerk, the support staff and our analysts for coming up with a very comprehensive proposal, which hopefully you will have a chance to look at so that we can consider it fully on Thursday. We will need to make a decision on it so we can submit it by the deadline on Friday.
Thank you very much.
The meeting is adjourned.