Ruminations

Blog dedicated primarily to randomly selected news items; comments reflecting personal perceptions

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Stephen Harper steps in to save Radarsat upgrade after budget cutbacks threatened satellite program’s future

John Ivison | Dec 19, 2012 12:01 AM ET
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Canadian Space Agency
Canadian Space Agency Three new Radarsat satellites would complete the surveillance coverage of Canada’s coasts, not only in the north but on our east and west coasts.
 
OTTAWA – The Harper government has approved funding for Canada’s world-beating surveillance satellite program, just as it seemed that it may become the victim of spending cutbacks.

Sources say the Prime Minister intervened personally to secure hundreds of millions of dollars in new funding to move the next generation of Radarsat satellites off the drawing board and into production. A public announcement of the funding deal is expected soon.

Stephen Harper has lauded Radarsat — a series of satellites monitoring Canadian territory from space — in his annual visits to the Arctic, saying they can “pick up a breaching whale through the fog … so we will be able to see what the bad guys are up to.”

But the future of Radarsat was in doubt when the 2012 federal budget did not include new funding to cover the 50% increase in costs from the original price-tag of $600-million for the three new Constellation satellites.

Mr. Harper directed the departments that would make use of the program, including Natural Resources Canada, Environment, Fisheries and Oceans and National Defence, which came up with more than half of the required funds, to make up the shortfall.

Radarsat has been developed by Vancouver-based Macdonald Dettwiler & Associates (MDA), which was subject to a takeover bid by U.S.-based Aliant Technologies that the Conservative government blocked on security grounds in 2008.

Fred Chartrand/The Canadian Press
Fred Chartrand/The Canadian Press   Stephen Harper during a trip to Canada's Arctic in 2007. He has long been a proponent of the Radarsat program.
 
The technology that the government was concerned about losing was the Radarsat surveillance satellites, two of which are already aloft. The three new satellites would complete the surveillance coverage of Canada’s coasts, not only in the north but on our east and west coasts. The satellites give surveillance teams a real-time picture of vessels as they move along Canadian coasts.

However, when there was no funding in the 2012 budget, the company warned that its teams of engineers and technicians would find other work. Analysts said that Canada was facing a space “brain drain,” as employees moved to the U.S. and Europe, in the face of government cuts. MDA laid off 100 people, while the country’s other main space firm, COM DEV, cut 31 staff. At the same time, the Canadian Space Agency had its budget cut by $60-million.

The Radarsat Constellation Mission — a series of three satellites and associated ground-based stations — was initially announced in 2005. The project was designed to replace the existing Radarsat-2 surveillance satellite.

The federal government has previously acknowledged its plan to begin the program in 2014 has been delayed by at least two years. The Department of National Defence had warned the satellites had to be in place by 2015 at the latest or Canada would be left without any space-based surveillance capability.

NASA
NASA   Chris Hadfield will soon become the first Canadian commander aboard the International Space Station.
 
In a late November report, former Conservative cabinet minister David Emerson said the space program is in Canada’s national interest “to unlock wealth, secure our coastlines and borders, protect our population and deliver services.”

Canada’s space industry will get a welcome boost Wednesday when Chris Hadfield is launched on a five month mission as the first Canadian commander aboard the International Space Station.

But critics worry that beyond the ISS and Radarsat, Canada’s space capabilities are being denuded.
The news that funding has been approved for the three new Constellation satellites will not be a panacea for the industry. But some smaller companies, such as Cambridge, Ont.-based exactEarth will benefit from the investment of public funds in Radarsat – three of its automatic identification system transmitters to aid vessel monitoring will be installed in the new Constellation satellites.
And there is speculation in the industry that the Unites States is interested in buying Constellation satellites once the project goes ahead.

National Post, with files from Postmedia News

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