I want to clarify. I have been doing Arctic research, and as an Arctic researcher for 20 years, I have lived in the Arctic for six of those, let's say. I wanted to be clear on that, because I don't live in the north right now.
I think that spending time in the north is absolutely necessary to have any sort of perception, understanding, context or appreciation. If you want to do research there or focus on there, let's say in Canada, Canadians should go to our own north. For me personally, though, living in the north in Norway gave me so much of a contrast between living at 72° north there and what our 72° north looks like in terms of prosperity, economic development and people's quality of life. That has given me a lot of insight. Why is it we think that everything's so impossible here, that it's just too cold, and we can't do anything? I think there's a problem with a national will and these ideas about the north. When I lived there, I had amazing Internet connectivity. I could be in a tunnel or over a bridge, and it didn't matter; I was still talking on the phone.
If you want to be doing research in the north, absolutely, you need to spend time there, and not just two weeks—fly in, fly out, and that type of thing—and on the ground.
I also think we need more opportunities. This goes back to having institutions, full academic institutions, in the north. We need more opportunities for people who do research of all sorts to go and want to do research in the north and be able to stay there and live there.
I was approached by a professor of mechanical engineering at U of T, who wanted to be part of this last call with this NordForsk-led international joint initiative for sustainable development of the Arctic. He's part of this advanced coating technology centre. He approached me and said that he knew that we do innovation in and out of the Arctic and that our executive team is 54% indigenous. He wanted to know if we'd be interested. I said, “This is interesting”. He thought they had this technology that could work for the north, even though his partners are in Norway and in Finland. I said, “Well, I don't know. We don't know. Let's make a research project around learning what's needed in the north.” It's about infrastructure and this cold-weather technology that could be applied to infrastructure.
I thought we would partner with an indigenous group in the north, Sahtu Secretariat Incorporated, because they're trying to build a road. I thought that this would be a nice merger of the two, because they can learn from one another about what kind of technologies and road infrastructure needs there are, and what their technology does. Who knows what the outcome of that collaboration would be? For some reason, Sahtu Secretariat Incorporated was not eligible for the co-PI, the co-principal investigator, on this partnership, so we didn't. There was no application put forward.
Yes, you have to be in the north, you have to go to the north, and you have to spend time, but it shouldn't be like going to the moon. We should be able to go to the north, do research and be an academic there.