Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I have to make a slight correction. I didn't say I didn't have anything prepared. I just don't have formal notes prepared in that context. I have been preparing for what I have been wanting to say for quite some time, actually, because this is such an important topic.
First of all, I welcome the committee's efforts to understand what is very complicated. I have seen from your list that you have come to many of Canada's leading experts and many experts outside.
I'm going to be focusing my comments on Canada, China and the Arctic in terms of how we can understand moving forward.
One of the things, of course, that we have to understand—and this goes with the theme of so many of your previous witnesses—is that there are a lot of misperceptions about what China is doing.
China has a long-standing interest in both polar regions, going as far back as 1984. In fact, for Canada, we first became aware of this in 1999, when their polar research vessel, the Xue Long, showed up at Tuktoyaktuk. They did ask our consent. There was a bit of a bobbling on it nevertheless.
When we look at China and the Arctic, there are five major issue areas that we have to be the most concerned with. They are related to the Chinese efforts with science, with governance, with shipping—and this is related to the polar silk road—with resources, and with the strategic and security dimensions.
The first four are the ones that everybody talks about, and those are the ones that are fairly well documented. The strategic side of China in the Arctic is the one that people are a bit more hesitant to really discuss, but in my view it is going to be the most important for Canada as we move forward.
We look at the issues coming forward, and I would love to get into these in more detail, but I will just highlight some of the key issues.
On the science side, what we know now is that China is one of the busiest countries in terms of mapping the Arctic Ocean sea bottom. They are allowed to do this under the terms of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, and they have been focusing so far on the areas that can be considered high seas. We think they are doing mapping in preparation for submarine transits of the region, though, once again, that's still an area of speculation.
In terms of resource development, there are at least three issues we have had with the Chinese in the Arctic. The first one is of course gold mining, as we know with the Holt Mine, and the issue of foreign involvement in that region. There is the ongoing issue of strategic minerals, and there is the issue of fishing. On the one hand, they have agreed to join the high seas Arctic fishing agreement. On the other hand, any observer knows the issue of ghost fleets and the fact that the Chinese really fish with two sides of their understanding to see how that works.
In terms of governance, this is the important one. This is one that I hope we can spend time on.
With the suspension of the Arctic Council, we're not quite sure what is going to be happening, because of the second stage of the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February of this year. China has been making some statements that any consideration of what happens to Russia vis-à-vis governance is something that they will be strongly against, so we have this issue of trying to understand the Chinese-Russian relationship in the Arctic, which is by no means certain but is going to be problematic for us as we try to move forward in the post-Ukrainian stage.
The last issue I will raise is the strategic issue. Be aware that the U.S. just released its most recent nuclear and defence policy, back at the end of October of this year. They highlight China as their “major issue of interest” in the long term—enemy, one could say when you read between the lines—and that is going to spill over into the Arctic.
This October, most people probably are not aware that the Chinese and the Russians for the first time ever sent a joint surface fleet operation into the Aleutian Islands. There were about eight vessels—four Chinese, four Russian—and we have never seen this done before.
We also have a very strong suspicion that the Chinese are trying to prepare their next-generation submarine for under-ice capabilities, which, of course, is going to vastly complicate the issue in terms of how we understand the geopolitical maritime dimension of what is happening in the Arctic.
In sum, there are a huge number of issues happening, all of which are going to have a major impact up in the Canadian Arctic, and one that I don't think is receiving the attention that it needs to.
Thank you very much.