Lancaster Sound () is a body of water in the Qikiqtaaluk Region, Nunavut, Canada. It is located between Devon Island and Baffin Island, forming the eastern entrance to the Parry Channel and the Northwest Passage. East of the sound lies Baffin Bay; to the west lies Viscount Melville Sound. Further west, a traveller would enter the M'Clure Strait before heading into the Arctic Ocean.
The Inuit and their predecessors in the region, the , have relied for hundreds, perhaps thousands of years, on the sound's abundant natural wealth for food, clothing and shelter. Today, residents of the three Nunavut communities of Pond Inlet, Arctic Bay, and Resolute continue this tradition, depending on their waters for their economic and cultural well-being.
This area was not yet represented in the Canadian National Marine Conservation Areas system, despite an attempt to do so at the request of local Inuit in 1987. A preliminary Minerals and Energy Resource Assessment to create a National Marine Park was completed in 1989, but nothing came of this.
A National Marine Conservation Area designation precluded oil and gas development, and questions arose when the Nunavut Impact Review Board approved a proposal from Natural Resources Canada (NRCAN) and the Geological Survey of Canada to conduct seismic testing for oil within Lancaster and Jones Sound in August and September 2010. The new seismic tests were not part of the Mineral and Energy Resource Assessment (MERA) process, which is necessary for establishing new parks. In June 2010, communities and groups came out against seismic testing in Lancaster and Jones Sound.
In late June, planned seismic tests were apparently scaled back. However, in late July NRCAN announced that plans for seismic testing were proceeding despite the unanimous opposition of Inuit communities and supporting organizations.
In a major ruling on August 8, 2010, a Nunavut court sided with the Inuit and stopped the planned seismic testing, citing the risks to Marine biology and cultural heritage. The federal Conservative government announced on December 6, 2010, that it would establish the boundaries of a new marine park in Lancaster Sound.
In 2012, the Qikiqtani Inuit Association (QIA) issued a report on Lancaster Sound for North Baffin communities entitled: "Tallurutiup Tariunga Inulik: Inuit Participation in Determining the Future of Lancaster Sound". The report has two stated purposes; to provide Nunavut Land Claims Beneficiaries with an introduction to the proposed Lancaster Sound National Marine Conservation Area (NMCA), and to inform Parks Canada, the Government of Nunavut and those interested of Inuit perspectives on marine conservation. This report explains what an NMCA is, the history surrounding interests in Lancaster Sound, the importance of where boundaries are suggested, and a discussion on the realities of Inuit cooperative management in Nunavut. "This report has been titled, Tallurutiup Tariunga Inulik, which means 'Lancaster Sound has people' and also 'Lancaster Sound has Inuit.' It is from the perspective of a homeland that QIA approaches discussions related to this great region."
In June 2016, the park gained the potential to expand into an area recommended by QIA when Shell Canada relinquished adjacent oil leases after a coalition of environmental groups argued that the leases had expired.
In August 2017, the federal government, the Territory of Nunavut and the Qikiqtani Inuit Association announced an agreement on the final boundary protecting a area, making it the largest marine conservation area in Canada. The final negotiation of an Inuit Impact Benefit Agreement is expected to be completed by the spring of 2019. The Tallurutiup Imanga—with its diversity of seabirds and marine and land mammals that have sustained the Inuit of the region for millennia, was mentioned in the United Nations' Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) 5th Global Biodiversity Outlook 2020 report in its section on Canada. Canada had established marine protected areas and undertook other "effective area-based conservation measures" that collectively covered over . This included the interim protection announced in 2017 for the Tallurutiup Imanga National Marine Conservation Area, Nunavut, in cooperation with the Qikiqtani Inuit Association.
|
|