Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
National

Increasing 'space-mindedness' a top priority for Canadian military: commander

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Apr, 2024 02:47 PM
  • Increasing 'space-mindedness' a top priority for Canadian military: commander

Brig.-Gen. Michael Adamson made the comments in front of the House of Commons national defence committee, which is studying the military's role in defending space for the first time. 

Far from sending uniformed soldiers into orbit, the space division is working to protect critical infrastructure here on Earth. 

Adamson said the military is dependent on space. 

"Everything we do, whether it's aircraft or ships or tanks or a soldier walking through the woods, relies on some kind of space-enabled capability," he said.

The space division is less than two years old, established in July 2022 as a standalone team within the Royal Canadian Air Force. 

It "has been focused on increasing what I have dubbed the space-mindedness within the (Armed Forces)," Adamson said. 

Adversaries would like to deny Canada and its allies the ability to operate in space, Adamson said, something that would have wide-ranging impacts on everyday life for Canadians who use GPS or satellite communications.

With space launches becoming easier and cheaper, private companies and countries like China are sending more and more satellites into orbit. 

But Canada has very little information about what those satellites are doing. 

While Norad monitors launches toward space and re-entries, it lacks the ability to keep an eye on things happening outside the atmosphere. 

"Watching objects in space is absolutely a U.S. Space Command responsibility," said Lt.-Gen Blaise Frawley, the deputy commander of Norad, who testified alongside Adamson.

There are no space launch sites in Canada, and Adamson said the military must be able to work with the private sector to grow the country's capabilities.

"We absolutely would love to collaborate more with industry ... but that requires us to be able to have frank and, at times, classified discussions with our industry partners," he said. 

Frawley said that type of work requires companies to get at least some members of their team security clearance, something that is happening in the United States.

A new Canadian "integration cell" is aimed at facilitating such conversations and keeping them separate from procurement projects. 

Space was included in Canada's official defence policy for the first time in 2017. 

In the updated policy, which was released earlier this month, space is mostly talked about in the context of China and Russia's efforts to develop new capabilities. 

MORE National ARTICLES

Canada-India dispute likely target for disinformation efforts, State Department warns

Canada-India dispute likely target for disinformation efforts, State Department warns
A senior State Department official says Canada's dispute with India could make for fertile ground for foreign efforts to sow disinformation. James Rubin, the co-ordinator of the Global Engagement Center, says the diplomatic standoff makes Canada "ripe" for manipulation, and not just from inside India.

Canada-India dispute likely target for disinformation efforts, State Department warns

4 year prison sentence for Kelowna robber

4 year prison sentence for Kelowna robber
A man who held up a bank in Kelowna and fled with more than 40-thousand-dollars in cash has been sentenced to four years in prison. Alan Stuart Metcalfe was sentenced in August after pleading guilty to one count of robbery, and the decision was released online this week.  

4 year prison sentence for Kelowna robber

Series of fires outside Mission

Series of fires outside Mission
The Mounties say police and firefighters responded Wednesday evening to a report of a structure fire on a vacant property along Gunn Avenue and found several buildings on fire, with indications that the blazes had been set intentionally. They say police responded to flames on a different property along the same road yesterday and again found they appeared to have been sparked intentionally.

Series of fires outside Mission

B.C. COVID-19 hospitalizations up 58% in two weeks, as infections, deaths also spike

B.C. COVID-19 hospitalizations up 58% in two weeks, as infections, deaths also spike
COVID-19 cases are on the rise in British Columbia, with the BC Centre for Disease Control reporting hospitalizations have increased 58 per cent in the past two weeks. The centre says in its latest update that deaths due to COVID-19 are also trending upwards, with 24 fatalities in the last week of September, compared to nine in the second week of August. 

B.C. COVID-19 hospitalizations up 58% in two weeks, as infections, deaths also spike

Spike in Vancouver's homeless count

Spike in Vancouver's homeless count
The count by the Homelessness Services Association of B-C was done on March 7th and 8th -- and identified just under five thousand people in 11 communities, up from the roughly 36-hundred identified in the March 2020 count.

Spike in Vancouver's homeless count

Surrey business community grapples with police tax

Surrey business community grapples with police tax
Business leaders in Surrey are pleading with the province to provide a clear plan as the city grapples with the next stage of implementing a new police force. The Surrey Board of Trade has sent a letter to Public Safety Minister Mike Farnworth saying the city needs a solid policing strategy with adequate wraparound support services and infrastructure as it juggles the costs of the outgoing R-C-M-P and incoming Surrey Police Service.

Surrey business community grapples with police tax