Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

Navy enters new era with new Arctic warship

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 Jul, 2020 10:43 PM
  • Navy enters new era with new Arctic warship

 The Royal Canadian Navy is poised to enter a new era by taking possession of the first armed warship under the federal government's multibillion-dollar shipbuilding plan, and the first built for Arctic military operations in decades.

HMCS Harry DeWolf was welcomed in a ceremony at Canadian Forces Base Halifax on Friday, five years after Irving Shipbuilding first started cutting steel on the Arctic offshore patrol ship — and two years later than originally scheduled.

Top navy officers marked the occasion along with representatives from Irving, which is slated to build five more such vessels for the navy and two for the Canadian Coast Guard in the next few years.

"These ships will be at the core of an enhanced Canadian Arctic presence, effectively complementing the capabilities of our other current and future warships through critical reconnaissance and surveillance operations," said Vice-Admiral Art McDonald, the commander of the navy, in a statement.

Harry DeWolf was a career navy officer who retired as chief of the naval staff in 1960. He rose to prominence as commander of HMCS Haida during the Second World War, known for daring tactical manoeuvres and sinking numerous enemy vessels, especially in the English Channel.

While the DeWolf's delivery is a major milestone for the federal government's shipbuilding plan — through which Ottawa is replacing nearly all of the large ships in the navy and coast guard — it wasn't easy coming.

Then-prime minister Stephen Harper first announced plans to build up to eight armed Arctic patrol vessels in July 2007 and Irving was selected in October 2011 to produce them before building replacements for the navy's frigates and destroyers.

But the following years saw several cost overruns and delays in the program.

After work started on the DeWolf in 2015, Irving said it would only be able to build five ships with the $3.1 billion budgeted for the project. The government ended up increasing the budget to $4.1 billion for six.

That money does not include the two ships for the coast guard, which are expected to cost about $400 million each.

Technical problems were also blamed for pushing the delivery date back several times. Then Irving closed its Halifax shipyard in March for several months because of COVID-19.

Despite those setbacks, University of Calgary professor Rob Huebert described the DeWolf's arrival as an "amazing step forward" for the Royal Canadian Navy. It's the first vessel specially built for military operations in the Arctic since the 1950s.

And it couldn't come at a better time, as more and more countries are starting to increase their interest — and military footprints — in the Far North, which is becoming easier to access due to climate change, said Huebert, who is an expert on Arctic policy.

"Even the most profound Arctic exceptionalist who says the Arctic is just peace, love and 'Kumbaya' will recognize there is a growing need to have at least a presence in the Arctic as it opens up and becomes a greater part of the geopolitical environment," he said.

"But once again, this is going to now give us a capability to operate that we haven't had since a short little period between 1956 to '57 with (HMCS) Labrador."

The Labrador was an icebreaker built for the navy but was in the fleet just a few years before being transferred to non-military use.

The navy was actually disdainful when Harper announced the new Arctic ships in 2007. Part of it was their slow speed and light armament, as the ships have only one small cannon. But mostly it was because the navy saw the Arctic as coast guard territory.

"Because they had not done this since '57, there was a little bit of: OK, what the hell do we do with these ships? We know what we need to do with NATO and in the Pacific. But this is going to sort of require us to scratch our head,'" Huebert said.

"Once the navy got comfortable and started realizing what it could do with it, that has subsequently changed."

The Royal Canadian Navy is only the latest naval force to join the fray in the Far North. Russia, the U.S., China and some European countries have been increasing their maritime capabilities in the region in recent years as part of a seemingly slow military buildup.

MORE National ARTICLES

N.S. fugitive still at large: police

N.S. fugitive still at large: police
A Nova Scotia fugitive accused of stabbing a police sergeant, assaulting a woman and injuring a police dog remains at large.

N.S. fugitive still at large: police

N.S. premier defends mass shooting review process

N.S. premier defends mass shooting review process
Premier Stephen McNeil says if panellists leading a review into Nova Scotia's recent mass shooting need more powers, he expects they will request them from his government.

N.S. premier defends mass shooting review process

Woman pushed from train platform seriously hurt

Woman pushed from train platform seriously hurt
Police say a woman suffered serious injuries after being pushed onto the tracks in front of an oncoming train in New Westminster, B.C.

Woman pushed from train platform seriously hurt

Analysis of Ukraine flight black boxes complete

Analysis of Ukraine flight black boxes complete
Canada's Transportation Safety Board says a team of international investigators has completed a preliminary analysis of the data from the flight recorders of the Ukrainian passenger jet shot down by Iran in January.

Analysis of Ukraine flight black boxes complete

Quebec tourists 'invade' Gaspe beaches

Quebec tourists 'invade' Gaspe beaches
Quebec's annual two-week construction holiday is in full swing, and with many Quebecers staying closer to home this summer because of COVID-19, towns in the Gaspe region are seeing an influx of tourists drawn to the charming seaside landscapes.

Quebec tourists 'invade' Gaspe beaches

Top court nixes video lottery terminal case

Top court nixes video lottery terminal case
The Supreme Court of Canada has ruled that a class-action lawsuit taking aim at video lottery terminals cannot proceed, saying Friday the claims made in the case are bound to fail.

Top court nixes video lottery terminal case