Coast guard struggling to help with rescues, Arctic resupply due to old fleet
OTTAWA — Reduced search-and-rescue coverage, ferry-service disruptions, cancelled resupply runs to Arctic and coastal communities and nearly $2 million in lost navigational buoys.
Those are among the real safety, social and commercial impacts that communities across the country are starting to feel as the Canadian Coast Guard’s fleet gets older, according to new documents obtained by The Canadian Press.
And the problems are expected to get worse: the documents warn that more than a third of the coast guard’s 26 large vessels have exceeded their expected lifespans and many won’t survive until replacements arrive.
“Vessels are at increasing risk of unrecoverable failure,” reads one PowerPoint presentation prepared by coast guard officials last summer and marked “secret.” “Many ships will not remain operational until their replacements arrive.”