Line of Defence Magazine - Winter (June-August) 2021

Page 6

SPOTLIGHT ON CANADA

Welcome to Canada! Canada’s defence industry is innovative, technology rich, export intensive, and globally competitive. In this special 10-page feature, we gain insights into Canada’s defence-focused industries and some of its leading players. In distinct neighbourhoods at opposite ends of the Pacific, New Zealand and Canada have long shared a relationship characterised as philosophical close yet geographically distant. The upgrade of HMNZS Te Mana and HMNZS Te Kaha in Victoria by Lockheed Martin Canada as part of the Anzac Frigate Systems Upgrade (FSU) project, however, may present as something of a turning point. As Grant Wyeth noted in The Diplomat in early 2020, the two RNZN vessels are the first foreign warships to be modernised in Canada since World War II, “making the contract not just an important bilateral development between the two countries, but also an important component of Canada’s involvement in Indo-Pacific security.” As the same time, Canada’s defence industry, deeply integrated into the North American defence industrial market since the 1940s, has been significantly challenged by the US International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR) and constrained market opportunities in Europe. Canada’s defence industry “Canada’s defence industry comprises approximately 640 firms generating $10.7bn (CAD) in sales, 54 percent of which is from exports, and contributing approximately 64,000 jobs across Canada,” Nicholas Todd, VP Policy and Communications at the Canadian Association of Defense and Security Industry (CADSI) told the New Zealand Defence Industry Association (NZDIA) Member Meeting in March. Canada’s defence industrial base includes but is not limited to shipbuilding and marine industries, aerospace industry, automotive sector, munitions, electronics, simulation and training, information and communications technologies, textile industry, in-service support and satellite and space technologies. Some of the areas in which the sector is seen to possess uniquely specialist capabilities are in munitions, arctic and cold weather capabilities, maritime domain awareness, intelligence and surveillance functions, cyber security, surveillance and control of borders and ports, soldier survivability, and C4ISR. “We are known for the light armoured vehicle, and also for several components or systems, including sonar navigation, outer space exploration, satellite technology, PPE, and commercial applications for what might have started off as military capabilities,” said Todd [CADSI has created a searchable capabilities database at www.gatewaycapabilities.ca]

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HMNZS Te Kaha sailing past the historic Fisgard Lighthouse at the mouth of Esquimalt Harbour in Colwood, British Columbia, as she commences intensive sea trials off Canada’s West Coast following systems upgrade at CFB Esquimalt. Image: RNZN.

By the numbers According to Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada’s (ISED) Statistical Overview of Canada’s Defence Industry in 2018, Canada’s defence industry: • Increased its jobs, revenues and export volume over the 2014-2018 period • With $415m worth of activity, was 4.5 times more R&D intensive than the broader manufacturing sector—led by industry funded R&D (with around 15 percent of funds coming from government) • STEM-related occupations’ share of its employment more than 3.5 times that of the manufacturing sector • Was globally engaged and export oriented • Varied greatly by firm ownership in terms of sourcing from Canadian suppliers Players within the industry include the Canadian operations of several international primes, large local suppliers, including Davie Shipbuilding, Seaspan Shipyards, MDA, CAE, Irving Shipbuilding, PAL Aerospace, IMP Aerospace and Defence, and a host of SMEs. Over 90 percent of the industry are, in fact, classed as SMEs (250 employees or less), who are responsible for generating 23 percent of defence industry sales, 31 percent of employment, 22 percent of R&D, and over 19 percent of exports.

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Articles inside

Serco: Reliability and innovation in RHIB fleet management

5min
pages 16-17

Editor’s Note

2min
page 4

Fire Prohibition Orders aim to remove guns from gangs

2min
page 46

Missionised Aircraft: Q&A with PAL Aerospace’s Paul Moss

4min
pages 8-9

Welcome to Canada!

2min
page 6

The importance of place in understanding security risk

5min
pages 44-45

Managing risk is more than just registering it

5min
pages 42-43

Global nuclear arsenals grow as states continue to modernise

4min
pages 36-37

National Security Journal’s Women and Security special issue

5min
pages 40-41

Opinion: Is it time New Zealand had a Ministry of 1,000 cups of tea?

2min
page 33

Arihia Bennett to chair Royal Commission Ministerial Advisory Group

2min
pages 38-39

New Zealand’s emerging Five Eyes challenge

5min
pages 34-35

Government needs better understanding, and management, of strategic suppliers

2min
page 32

We’d be dumb if we didn’t: Embracing progressive procurement

10min
pages 28-31

How THEON SENSORS became a world leader in night-vision and thermal-imaging systems

3min
pages 20-21

archTIS and Tabella announce information security partnership

2min
pages 26-27

Maerospace: Accurate, reliable maritime intelligence in real time

4min
pages 12-13

The MQ-9B SeaGuardian redefines the future of maritime and naval security

5min
pages 24-25

Engaging with the Canadian Defence Industry

4min
pages 14-15

Grey Zone: A Chance for Defence to Lead

4min
pages 22-23

The Interview: Defence Minister Peeni Henare

8min
pages 16-19

Telemus: Contributing to the CEMA picture

2min
pages 10-11
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