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Foreign Affairs committee It's a wonderful question, and it enables me to raise the point that some ships actually travel submerged and the issue of submarine transits of the Northwest Passage is a very pertinent issue, particularly because the Los Angeles Times last Saturday reported that a U.S. nuclear-
March 4th, 2009Committee meeting
Prof. Michael Byers
Foreign Affairs committee On the Antarctic, you're right, there is a comprehensive multilateral treaty governing that continent. But one has to remember that the Arctic is not a continent. The Arctic is largely an ocean. It's a very different situation from Antarctica. The treaty that I referred to in res
March 4th, 2009Committee meeting
Prof. Michael Byers
Foreign Affairs committee In 2007, just a year and a half ago, planet earth lost 1.2 million square kilometres of Arctic sea ice. I spend a lot of time speaking to international experts on climate change and sea ice, and we can expect a similar pace of change in the years ahead, to the point where my coll
March 4th, 2009Committee meeting
Prof. Michael Byers
Foreign Affairs committee Yes, I do.
March 4th, 2009Committee meeting
Prof. Michael Byers
Foreign Affairs committee Thank you very much. It is the Arctic Council, an international organization created thanks to Canada and specifically Lloyd Axworthy, former Minister of Foreign Affairs.
March 4th, 2009Committee meeting
Prof. Michael Byers
Foreign Affairs committee The European countries you're referring to are all partners in NATO. If the two North American partners in NATO decided they had to do this for a security reason, I'm quite confident that our European allies would fall into line, particularly if, as part of this agreement, we mad
March 4th, 2009Committee meeting
Prof. Michael Byers
Foreign Affairs committee Thank you for those very pertinent questions. On the Northwest Passage, I think both countries have tenable arguments. I wouldn't want to litigate this because the risks of losing would be too high, and I believe the United States would take the exact same view, that this shoul
March 4th, 2009Committee meeting
Prof. Michael Byers
Foreign Affairs committee Thank you very much. Thank you for inviting me to speak and for allowing me to do so by video conference today. By staying in Vancouver, I'm able to address another even more intimidating audience later this afternoon in the form of 150 undergraduate students. The issue of Canad
March 4th, 2009Committee meeting
Professor Michael Byers
Foreign Affairs committee I think the answer to that is that there are some public goods that private industry will not provide on its own. That is why Radarsat-2 was built through this public-private partnership. One could conceive of other things being subject to the net benefit test and not passing tha
April 15th, 2008Committee meeting
Prof. Michael Byers
Foreign Affairs committee I think Mr. Prentice has to stick by his decision. In fact, any uncertainty he's created in the market would only be exacerbated if he flipped back and allowed the sale to proceed. What he has done is that he has made the right decision, but he's done so with an act that is not
April 15th, 2008Committee meeting
Prof. Michael Byers
Foreign Affairs committee I certainly take the view that the second-largest country on earth should have surveillance ability of its territory at all times, including at night, which is why we built the Radarsat technology rather than optical technology. This technology is made-in-Canada technology for a
April 15th, 2008Committee meeting
Prof. Michael Byers
Foreign Affairs committee Thank you for recognizing me. I think one could reasonably take the view that it would have been better to keep the development of Radarsat-2 vested entirely within the government agency, the Canadian Space Agency, rather than constructing the private-public partnership that was
April 15th, 2008Committee meeting
Prof. Michael Byers
Foreign Affairs committee For the committee's information, for five years I taught as a professor of international law at Duke University in North Carolina. I know a reasonable amount about the way the United States applies its laws extraterritorially. I would remind you of the controversy over the Helm
April 15th, 2008Committee meeting
Prof. Michael Byers
Foreign Affairs committee Let me say as well, to be entirely clear, that I support Mr. Prentice's decision. I also support his stated intent to seek a national security exception through an amendment to the Investment Canada Act in the future. My only point here is that of those two policies, one got ahea
April 15th, 2008Committee meeting
Prof. Michael Byers
Foreign Affairs committee Good afternoon. Thank you for having me.
April 15th, 2008Committee meeting
Professor Michael Byers