Group says long-awaited high Arctic research station is nearly complete
A decade after it was first promised, Canada’s new High Arctic Research Station is nearly complete and already giving scientists access to a vast new section of ice and tundra.
“We’re trying to come up with a long-term, systematic, multi-disciplinary view of this part of the world, which is really understudied,” said David Scott, president of Polar Knowledge Canada, which operates the new station in Cambridge Bay, Nunavut.
A line item in the 2007 federal budget, the station was a centrepiece of former Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s Arctic strategy. Located in the centre of the High Arctic right along the Northwest Passage, the station was to give researchers a home base in a part of the North lacking in scientific infrastructure.
Although work will continue on the main building for a few months, the centre is “largely operational,” said Scott.


