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Canadian Coast Guard Arctic Response Strategy EPPR November 2009

Canadian Coast Guard Arctic Response Strategy EPPR November 2009. Building from Initial ARS. Items of significant improvement Better understanding of Arctic Conditions through more detailed Area Analysis Better understanding of existing Prevention practices

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Canadian Coast Guard Arctic Response Strategy EPPR November 2009

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  1. Canadian Coast GuardArctic Response StrategyEPPRNovember 2009

  2. Building from Initial ARS • Items of significant improvement • Better understanding of Arctic Conditions through more detailed Area Analysis • Better understanding of existing Prevention practices • Better definition of other governments departments responsibilities/limitations • Completion of area plans provided a clearer assessment of local priorities/resources at risk 2

  3. Offshore response capacity • Limited to certain geographic zones • Response times dependent upon location and weather variables • Arctic Ship Packs aboard CCG Ships in Arctic waters 3

  4. CCG Ships 4

  5. Framework • Design Considerations • Framework • First Response (OHF’s/Shipping) • Community Packs • RAT 150T (Hay River) • Delta 1000T (Churchill, Iqaluit, Tuktoyaktuk) • Delta 8000T (Cascaded from Regional and National Inventories) • 8000T or Greater (Cascaded from National Inventories) 5

  6. Resolute Tuktoyaktuk Holman Arctic Bay Clyde River Kugluktuk Cambridge Bay Gjoa Haven Iqaluit Cape Dorset Hay River Coral Harbour Rankin Inlet Churchill Environmental Response Arctic Community Pack / First Response Unit Delta 1000T Depot Rapid Air Transportable Depot Rapid Road Transportable Depot Response Organization Pond Inlet Qikiqtarjuaq Hall Beach Pangnirtung Yellowknife Baker Lake Kimmirut Chesterfield Inlet Proposed additional Arctic Community Packs 6

  7. First Response • Parameters • Initial spill, source control, minor recovery, immediate resources at risk • 0-1T volume • 0-48 hour response • Community, OHF and Shipping partnership with CCG required 7

  8. Rapid Air Transportable 150T • Parameters • Palletized equipment, access to 39 of 47 communities, recovery, protection storage, shoreline cleanup, decon suite • 1-150T volume • 48-96 hours • CCG dedicated and maintained 8

  9. Delta 1000T Depots • Locations • Churchill, Iqaluit, Tuktoyaktuk • Parameters • Supplement RAT 150T • Up to 1000T volume • Spill circumstances determine timeframes 9

  10. Delta 8000T (Regional/National) • Parameters • Design is currently under development in light of Regionally stated Levels of Service. • Provision of this capability is highly dependent upon spill circumstances and may require National Support. 10

  11. 8000T or Greater • The cumulative National Levels of Service currently speaks to this potential requirement. • This capability requires National Levels of Service Review consideration. 11

  12. Benefits • Provides a clearer more defined role including partnerships • Addresses the vast majority of incident types and volumes • Considers the results of the Area analyses • Provides for more accurate financial information 12

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