- Reaction score
- 12,122
- Points
- 1,360
This is not about manouevre in the maritime domain. It is about the information domain. St.John provides no visible (to Canadians, allies, and adversaries) commitment in the Arctic.....
Maritime Manoeuvre and Logistics also aren't necessarily concerned with the same things. A Deepwater port in Churchill allows us to dominate the entire interior of our Country. This is about resource exploitation, territorial dominance and as you said, messaging to others.
My point was merely that the Arctic resupply route doesn't go the way Humprey's map shows, then pointing out the similarity in distance between posting a ship there or St John's (which is the Coast Guard's main base for the Arctic - with support from Quebec City). I am not saying that we shouldn't use Churchill, nor arguing against the visibility factor.
If this is about the information domain, I'd rather the GoC get on with the Grays Bay road and port project and use that to ressuply and support Arctic operations. Then you can't get bottled up by someone blocking Hudson's Strait.
With Baffinland just receiving approval for the construction of their railway, Churchill absolutely becomes a viable and potentially important port for exploiting the untapped mineral wealth in the North. They were the first but there will certainly be others now.
My only 2 questions would be this;
1) How long is the shipping season from Churchill to Iqaluit without the need for icebreakers?
2) Though 400nm shorter, does a ship from Churchill to Iqaluit run at the same speed as a ship from St John's to Iqaluit? Meaning is the duration the same or less from Churchill to Iqaluit?
1. July to October (4 months). This could be expanded to 6 months with some resources thrown at the problem. If icebreaking vessels are used, it could potentially be even longer.
2. During the summer season, my understanding is speeds are comparable. As the ice comes, speeds will slow down in Hudson Bay sooner than the open ocean.



