![](/web/20061103023338im_/http://www.nrcan-rncan.gc.ca/media/images/trans.gif)
Government of Canada
2005/57
July 14, 2005
Undersea Data: Canada and Denmark Agree on Joint Survey
OTTAWA — Canada and Denmark have agreed to team up on an undersea
data collection project that will help both countries fulfill international
commitments. Representatives from Natural
Resources Canada (NRCan) and
the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland signed a Memorandum
of Understanding (MOU) Ottawa on June 27, 2005.
The MOU outlines
collaborative surveys in areas north of Ellesmere Island, in Canada's
eastern high Arctic, and Greenland, a Home Rule Territory of Denmark.
The surveys will help establish the limits of the undersea
continental shelves of both countries, as required under the United
Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS).
"This cooperative approach will make it easier for our northern
nations to deal with the tremendous technical and physical challenges
posed by the harsh climate and remote locations of these studies," said
the Honourable R. John Efford, Minister of Natural Resources Canada. "By
allowing Canada and Denmark to work closely together to interpret the
data collected from these surveys, this MOU will promote our understanding
of this area of mutual interest while reducing costs."
NRCan's Geological Survey of Canada and the Canadian Hydrographic
Service of the Department of Fisheries and Oceans are currently performing
surveys to determine the limits of those portions of Canada's Arctic
and Atlantic continental shelves that lie beyond the 200-nautical-mile
exclusive economic zone. Canada must submit particulars of these limits,
along with supporting technical data, to the UN within 10 years of the
date on which it became a party to UNCLOS, which was December 7, 2003.
Establishing the limits of the extended continental shelf will allow
Canada to determine precisely the full extent of the area over which
it exercises exclusive sovereign rights for the purpose of exploration
and exploitation of natural resources, such as minerals, hydrocarbons
and sedentary species.
The MOU with Denmark advances the Government of Canada's commitment
to the sustainable development of our natural resources, which are a
vital part of Canada's economy and society. It also supports the
Government's
commitment to building on the strength of our country and our people.
FOR BROADCAST USE:
Canada and Denmark have agreed to team up on an undersea data collection
project that will help both countries fulfill international commitments.
Representatives from Natural Resources Canada and the Geological Survey
of Denmark and Greenland signed the Memorandum of Understanding in Ottawa
on June 27. The surveys will help establish the limits of the undersea
continental shelves of both countries.
For more information, media may contact:
Ghyslain Charron
Media Relations
Natural Resources Canada
Ottawa
(613) 992-4447 |
Tom Ormsby
Director of Communications
Office of the Minister
Natural Resources Canada
Ottawa
(613) 996-2007 |
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