Arctic

Canadian funding for legendary glacier research facility in doubt

One of Canada's oldest and most celebrated scientific research stations is racing against the clock to avoid having to close its doors.

The Kluane Lake Research Station, located in Canada's northwestern Yukon territory, is adjacent to the largest non-polar icefield in the world, is one of a handful of scientific outposts to have its funding cut by the federal budget.

The Kluane Lake facility, which celebrated its 50th anniversary last year amid a $2-million renovation, was told in the spring that federal funding for its operations would be immediately discontinued.

CBC News has learned that its scientists unleashed a flurry of phone calls and letters that resulted in a moratorium on the decision and an extension of money to the cash-strapped station, administered by the University of Calgary's Arctic Institute of North America, that will keep it alive for several more months.

But if no new sources of funding are secured by March 2013, the legendary pied-a-terre for northern field work may be forced to close.

"We have to explore and develop new funding models to keep the doors of the station open if the money the federal government was providing isn't restored by that time," says Peter Dawson, the acting executive director of the Arctic Institute.

The Kluane Lake facility, which lost $106,000, half its operating budget, to the cuts, considered, as a worst-case scenario, doubling the daily rate for researchers to use the base as a way to try and make up the shortfall. (The refurbished facility earned a record $57,000 from hosting field researchers in 2011, according to its annual report.)

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But those who operate the station came to the conclusion that charging the higher tariff would probably deter scientists from using the station and would be counterproductive.

Scientists at Kluane Lake say they're hoping politicians in Ottawa will have a change of heart. "The Conservatives have been saying 'Don't worry, it's just a moratorium, we're going to get something in place,'" says Sian Williams, one of the base managers at Kluane Lake Research Station.

"We're planning to hold them to that because that's the only hope these research stations have across the North."

The recent budget cuts in Ottawa have resulted in cutbacks worth $70 million in annual research money doled out by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC).

Scores of research stations and scientific organizations across the country rely on that government-funded body for their survival.

Canada-U.S. research

The Kluane facility is run by the Arctic Institute of North America, a joint U.S.-Canada research operation that is administered by the University of Calgary along with the University of Alaska.

The scientists at Kluane Lake say their facility is of inestimable value because it sits in one of the world's most unique open-air laboratories. Its windows look out onto Yukon's Kluane National Park, a 22,000-square kilometre wilderness area that boasts Canada's highest mountains and a segment of the largest non-polar icefield on Earth.

Kluane and adjacent parks in British Columbia and Alaska together also form the largest protected area on the planet — a UNESCO World Heritage site.

Scientists say this hyper-sensitive region of multiple ecological zones contains a wealth of plants, animals and glaciers that make it an ideal test tube to measure the changes taking place in the Earth's climate.

In addition to Kluane Lake, other environmental research centres including Experimental Lakes Area in Ontario and the Polar Environmental and Atmospheric Research Laboratory on Ellesmere Island in Nunavut have had their funds cut as well, as part of new austerity measures by the federal government.

All of the affected environmental outposts are involved in climate science research, which has provoked an outcry by many Canadian scientists who allege that the Harper government is waging a war on academics studying the natural world — and those looking at climate change in particular.

The impact of these cuts, they argue, will damage the country's ability to train world-class scientists and will also impede the flow of timely environmental data crucial for sound policymaking.

"What we're getting out of the current government is an attitude of 'We can't do this and we don't want to do this. It's not in our best immediate interest,'" says Richard Bello, a climatologist in the department of geography at York University in Toronto.

"I find it a terribly myopic view of how we should be running the country and what our objectives should be."

The scientists at Kluane Lake say the outpost is important because, in addition to furthering knowledge about ecosystems, it sits in a position best suited to monitor the vital signs of the planet.

Having a 50-year research station here gives us the baseline data to look at how things have been changing and will continue to change into the next century", says Williams.

"A lot of the really important ice in the world is in these non-polar glaciers, and that's a major source of fresh water for a lot of the planet. We're one of the only research stations looking at that."

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Canada's prime minister, Stephen Harper, had a first-hand look at Kluane and its icefields only last August when he flew in as part of his now annual Northern tour.

The prime minister was also overseeing a $9-million federal investment in the national park's visitors centre and a nearby cultural centre for the Champagne and Aishihik First Nations.

Caught up in a local controversy over Environment Canada's plans to eliminate water monitoring in the North, the prime minister quickly reversed that decision when he was in Kluane last summer. But the NSERC cuts to the research facility would come just six months later.

Climate record goes back to Ice Age

Research at the site of the Kluane Lake station actually goes back to 1949 when its parent organization, the Arctic Institute at the University of Calgary, began to survey what was then a completely unknown corner of Canada's wilderness.

Civilian and military scientists set up high-altitude glacial camps along the slopes and ridges of Mount Logan, Canada's highest mountain, to study, among other things, the physiological effects of extreme altitude on human beings.

Set beside a small airfield on Kluane Lake with a stunning view of the Slims River Valley, the base has since acted as a way station for natural scientists from across Canada and the U.S., working in every discipline.

One project, spanning more than three decades and involving the study of ice core samples from glaciers, has managed to build a 10,000-year climate record going all the way back to the end of the Ice Age.

That legacy, and the importance of their work, is driving scientists at the station to turn over every stone in an effort to find the money to keep the facility running.

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Williams says she and her colleagues are looking at the option of industry investing in the facility in return for access to its database. They're also trying to secure funding from the Yukon government.

Despite a sense of hope and optimism, the feeling of Kluane Lake's scientists of having been abandoned remains palpable.

"It's a federal responsibility to support science in Canada," says Williams. "What goes on here has wide-ranging implications for the entire country — including keeping our scientists at a world-class level."

This story is posted on Alaska Dispatch as part of Eye on the Arctic, a collaborative partnership between public and private circumpolar media organizations.

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