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North

Build dock first, port later, say sealift companies

The three shipping companies that service Nunavut are calling for some type of docking facility in Iqaluit soon, instead of waiting for a deep sea port to be built sometime in the future.

Shipping companies say Iqaluit needs some type of docking facility now

The three shipping companies that service Nunavut are calling for some type of docking facility in Iqaluit soon, instead of waiting for a deep sea port to be built sometime in the future.

Iqaluit has been lobbying for a deep sea port and has been trying to find the millions to build it. But thesealift companies attending the Nunavut Trade Show and Conference say it's better for leaders to be realistic and get some type of less elaborate docking infrastructure in place.

A sealift ship is anchored amid ice in Frobisher Bay off Iqaluit earlier this summer when ice was delaying unloading of cargo from the ships. (CBC)

"You look here in Iqaluit, nothing's changed since the time of Martin Frobisher, nothing at all," said Suzanne Paquin, with Nunavut Eastern Arctic Shipping.

"The vessels are much bigger, they're significantly better. What does that mean to the North? Well it means that the ships have to be anchored farther away and that means they're exposed to all the harsh weather, the elements, the wind, which means there's more days especially in the fall where we can't work."

That costs companies time and money.

Paquin said Iqaluit could look to Nunavik for examples of smaller ports that meet both the companies and the communities' needs.

Peter Woodward with the Woodward Group of Companies suggests re-using what was put at the causeway by the American military.

"We really do believe that you need a docka piece of concrete, nothing elaborateand some ability to accommodate some tidal influences," he said. "You could pull tractor trailers up."

Woodward said it would make a big difference for people in Nunavut's capital.