Canada is a maritime nation. We are defined as much by our oceans as by land. Three of the world’s oceans border our coastline, which is the longest in the world at about 244,000 km. Our oceans regions total almost 6 million square kilometers, equivalent to almost 60% of Canada’s land mass. In addition, Canada's extended continental shelf (beyond 200 nautical miles), once delimited through the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) process, is estimated to be equivalent in size to three Prairie provinces combined.
Eight out of our ten provinces border on the oceans, as do the Northwest Territories, Nunavut and Yukon. The oceans provide recreational, environmental, employment, income and cultural staples to over 7 million Canadians who live in coastal communities – more than twenty percent of Canada’s total population. Our oceans are important and present an opportunity to make a greater contribution to our well-being and to benefit from the protection of critical marine environments.
Living on the land limits our vision of what our oceans look like beneath the surface. Few Canadians have seen our sub-sea valleys, plains and mountains. The Sable Gully off Nova Scotia’s coast is a massive sub-sea canyon, and is now one of Canada’s marine protected areas. Some of our country’s most magnificent vistas are found where the land joins the sea – coastal fjords and inlets, bays and estuaries, arctic ice fields, and archipelagos made up of thousands of islands and countless beaches.
Canada’s marine wildlife numbers in the thousands of species including orcas, polar bears, walrus, sea otters, and bowhead whales, which live for more than 200 years. We have shellfish, finfish, seabirds, marine plants and other seabed animals, including forests of thousand year-old corals and unique glass sponge reefs. These are part of our incredibly diverse oceans.
The role that oceans have played in Canada’s history cannot be overemphasized. They are an inherent part of our environmental, social, cultural and economic fabric. Aboriginal peoples and Canada’s coastal communities have longstanding ties to their oceans and other marine resources. With Canada’s Oceans Act, we have made a commitment to manage them wisely.
With the passage of the Oceans Act in 1996, followed by the release of Canada’s Oceans Strategy in July 2002, we established a new legislative and policy framework to modernize oceans management. The Oceans Act is founded on three principles:
Guided by these principles, Canada can continue to develop a dynamic and diverse
oceans economy in a way that ensures that we will protect the marine environment
on which that economy is based.
Modern
oceans management arrangements are necessary to enable Canadians to more fully
realize the potential of their oceans. Currently, oceans governance
arrangements are not designed to deal with the challenges of modern oceans
management. The approach is fragmented, exceedingly complex, lacks transparency,
and is focused on solving problems after they appear.
The current approach has resulted in:
Without a strategy to more effectively manage our oceans and address these challenges, there will be continued environmental degradation and lost economic and employment prospects. This will have serious consequences for coastal and Aboriginal communities that already face the challenge of maintaining healthy environments and providing the necessary infrastructure to support, sustain and grow their communities.
The Government of Canada recognizes the importance of action to address these
challenges.
In addition, the Government of Canada committed in the October 2004 Speech from the Throne, to:
“move forward on its Oceans Action Plan by maximizing the use and development of oceans technology, establishing a network of marine protected areas, implementing integrated management plans, and enhancing the enforcement of rules governing oceans and fisheries, including rules governing straddling stocks."
The Oceans Action Plan responds to that commitment and advances the legislation and policy in place as well as the Government of Canada’s commitment to smart regulation. The Oceans Action Plan articulates a government-wide approach to seize opportunities for sustainable development. The Plan serves as the overarching umbrella for coordinating and implementing oceans activities, and as the framework to sustainably develop and manage our oceans.
The Oceans Action Plan is based on four inter-connected pillars:
This will take time, and we must start with the foundation pieces needed to achieve sustained, long-term change. The most fundamental of these are new oceans governance arrangements (“integrated management" under the Oceans Act), and ecosystem science to improve the management of the marine environment.
Phase I includes a series of interrelated initiatives that will be completed within 24 months, which build on progress made to date and set the foundation for achieving the long-term objectives of the Oceans Act and Canada’s Oceans Strategy. Subsequent phases of the Oceans Action Plan will broaden the geographic scope of oceans management, deepen action across the Government and take advantage of of lessons learned in Phase I.