Manitoba’s Port of Churchill gets special attention in meeting between Kinew, Carney | CBC News


Manitoba’s Port of Churchill gets special attention in meeting between Kinew, Carney | CBC News

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Prime Minister Mark Carney says plans to expand the Port of Churchill as part of a trade corridor through northern Manitoba are a top priority.

Carney made the comment before meeting with Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew, who is pushing to have Churchill, on the west coast of Hudson Bay, serve as a major port to ship goods to Europe and beyond.

The plan was among several shortlisted last year by the federal government as “transformative” projects, although major improvements would be needed to rail, port and other infrastructure.

Studies are underway to gauge private-sector interest and examine the use of icebreakers to extend the port’s short shipping season.

After the meeting in Ottawa, Kinew said the politicians have agreed to find near-term opportunities to increase the shipment of critical minerals from the port.

Manitoba also joined other provinces in signing a deal with the federal government to have a “one-window” federal-provincial regulatory process to examine major projects.

“Together, we are cutting red tape and streamlining approvals to build new trade and energy corridors that will power our industries, create thousands of high-paying Canadian careers and expand our reach in global markets,” Carney said in a news release Tuesday.

Kinew said there is big potential for a northern Manitoba trade corridor, which he has said could include a pipeline to ship energy from Western Canada.

The Port of Churchill has been less active since the dismantling of the Canadian Wheat Board.
Kinew says a revitalized Port of Churchill could play a key role in Canada’s efforts to expand trade and secure Arctic sovereignty. (CBC)

“As the war in Iran drives up energy costs and destabilizes global supply chains, the importance of Churchill cannot be overstated,” Kinew said in a news release.

“Not only will Churchill help get Canadian energy to new markets in Europe and India, but investment in the town, port and rail line will help us defend Arctic sovereignty and strengthen our economic ties to Nunavut.”

WATCH | What Churchill locals think of expansion plans:

How an expanded port could transform the polar bear capital of the world

Expanding Churchill’s 100-year-old deepwater port is high on Prime Minister Mark Carney’s nation-building agenda. For The National, CBC’s Karen Pauls visits the ‘polar bear capital of the world’ to hear what locals think of the plan.