Canada Could Lose Control of Northwest Passage, Says Prof EDMONTON (CUP) -- Canada will lose control over the Northwest Passage in the next five years if the government doesn't take action now, said University of Alberta political science professor Morris Maduro. Maduro, a visiting professor from the University of Regina, spoke to a small but attentive group of professors and stu- dents March 13. His lecture——entitled "The Northwest Passage, Canada, and the United States: On a Collision Course in Troubled Waters"———was part of the department's series, Reshaping Globalization: Empires, Gender, Race & Class. The Northwest Passage, a 3,500 mile-long strait through the Canadian Arctic archipelago, was first explored by Europeans in the 1570s, and was impene- trable for centuries. Enter global warming, said Maduro. Arctic ice is melting at a rate of nine per cent every year, and areas the size of Alberta disappear every decade. "In five years, the Passage will be navigable in the summer, and in 10 years, in the winter," Maduro warned. "This will become one of the hottest issues dividing Canada from the a5." The rest of the world is watching, he said. The Panama Canal is currently the main route for trans-oceanic shipping, but rising tolls, Panama's unstable government, and the threat of terrorism have forced Take in a movie at City Cinema > Playing this Week: Two Towers Lord of the Rings pt2 Times and Descriptions at www.citycinema.net © 368-3669 European, and particularly American busi- nesses to look north. : "For 25 years, they've goaded Canada, tweaked its nose and sent vessels through [the passage]," Maduro said. But international law also works against Canada, said Maduro. Under the 1982 Law of the Sea Convention, a United Nations document ratified by over 150 countries, the Northwest Passage is one of 110 straits worldwide to be classified as "critical." Canada is powerless to limit’ access to and travel through the Passage. © Maduro also emphasized environ- mental concerns. Canada already has 624 shipping accidents annually, which harm wildlife and cost millions to clean up. If an oil spill occurred, like that of the Exxon Valdez in 1989, which spilled 11 million tonnes of crude oil into the Passage, the Arctic ecosystem would be catastrophically effected. Yet the Canadian government will do nothing, he argued. Maduro's contacts in the Department of External Affairs told him, "We don't want to wake the sleeping lion. We hope the melting won't_occur." Canadian military commitment in STUDENTS imagine... not having to explain your marks to your parents! IT iS POSSIBLE! Call us today. 892-9645 www.spellread.com — Igniting - Success! Confederation Court Mall 2’° Level the Arctic is minimal, he described. There are army bases at Inuvik in Nunavut and Alert in the Northwest Territories, 1,500 mobile Inuit Rangers, and 500 soldiers sta- tioned in Yellowknife. But despite international laws pre- venting submarines from travelling sub- merged in straits, the Canadian navy sight- ed 12 periscopes near Baffin Island in August and September of 2000. Maduro called on Canada to pres- ent the Passage as an "unusual" body of water because of its unique length, naviga- tional hazards, and ecosystem, and said he believed Canada could secure special recognition and international funding for the Passage's protection. Tom Keating, the respondent to Maduro's lecture and a fellow professor in the department, stressed the controversy will reshape the way Canadians see their country. He suggested bilateral coopera- tion with Americans to reduce the future economic pressure of maintaining the Passage for shipping and to develop com- mercial opportunities. But Canada must act quickly, said Keating. "(Canadian folk singer] Stan Rogers called the Passage 'one warm line through a land so wide and savage.' The line's widening, and Canadian sovereignty is going to be savaged." dy the SCIENCE and AR North America's Leading School in Complementary Health Science Are you passionate about health and helping others? Are you looking for a rewarding and stimulating career? Do you think you might have the "TOUCH"? Places still available for SEPTEMBER ! Transfer students welcome! Pre Requisite _ Weekend Workshops April 12-13 May 17-18 June 7-8 a 2500 hour advanced program a competency-based curnicul FRENCH & ENGLISH Maes ieks ele) We offer you... 15 years training expenence WWW.KINECONCEPT.COM ego (ai 495-C, Prospect St, Fredericton CALL NOW! RIE ea) page’ | ¥rfapri 2 3603