Thank you so much.
I'm coming to you from Iqaluit, Nunavut. I'm sorry I wasn't able to attend in person. We had a blizzard yesterday.
CanArctic Inuit Networks is an Inuit-owned and Inuit-led company based here in Iqaluit. The goal of our company is to build 4,500 kilometres of subsea fibre optic cable through Canada's Arctic, from Labrador to Inuvik. Basically, the route is up along the coast of Labrador, Baffin Island, through the high Arctic and into the Northwest Passage. The plan is to build out networks that will connect Inuit communities in all four regions of Inuit Nunangat, including industrial/military installations.
The cable will have multi-purpose infrastructure. It will allow for strategic parts of the route to be SMART cable, which stands for “science monitoring and reliable telecommunications”. There is currently a serious lack of Arctic marine environmental data, a lack of seabed mapping, and effectively very little to no marine baseline information on everything from temperatures to salinity and currents. Of course, the change in climate is significant.
The SMART cable can help develop that baseline data and begin to monitor climate change in real time. Both the U.S. and Canadian military want and need the same infrastructure as our northern communities: telecommunications, energy and transportation, everything from good connectivity—that is reliable, stable, high-throughput, fast and affordable—to ports and runways. We need infrastructure solutions.
Satellite can provide aerial and surface data, but it is limited in being able to provide data on what's happening in the marine environment. DISA, the Defense Information Systems Agency, is relying more and more on fibre. Fibre and satellite are integrated technologies, but fibre is needed to move large continuous data, especially for all-domain awareness. We know we're going to need to be able to analyze large datasets primarily through artificial intelligence.
Recently, Canada awarded a NORAD contract to Nasittuq, a majority Inuit-owned company, and both the United States and Canada have committed to NORAD modernization, especially since Russia's invasion of Ukraine. However, there is a growing risk and threat from China, especially as China has its sights on the Arctic and has begun serious plans for ice class ships, submarines and underwater drones.
Our allies, including other Arctic nations plus NATO, recognize that continental defence must include all-domain awareness. The marine environment is where we have the least capabilities and the necessity for under-ice persistence.
SednaLink has the support of the Inuit organizations, Inuit development corporations, chambers of commerce and northern and Inuit businesses.
CanArctic can save the Government of Nunavut $209 million by having the Inuit private sector build, own and manage the fibre optic cable, $209 million the Nunavut communities desperately need for other infrastructure, including schools, health centres, municipal water systems and municipal garages for water and sewage trucks and plows.
Despite the fact that SednaLink is the perfect project to be funded under the Canada Infrastructure Bank's indigenous funding program and ISED's universal broadband fund, the UBF does not support telecommunications redundancy or even favour the Inuit private sector.
The cheapest Internet can be provided by SednaLink because we plan to use the utility-based model. Customer rates are based on covering the base O and M. Any additional profits can lower the cost to customers, and money can be set aside to expand the subsea fibre networks in phases 2 to 4.
SednaLink has been independently reviewed by two international companies specializing in subsea fibre projects, which have deemed SednaLink viable and have recommended to Inuit organizations and Inuit development corporations to invest in it.
SednaLink, with the SMART cable, also has the opportunity to develop real Inuit capacity in telecommunications, develop a blue economy and monitor climate change, and we can do this better, faster and cheaper than the government can.
When we say northerners must be part of the solution, that includes Inuit businesses.
Thank you.