Northwest Passage Transits


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Daria Blackwell
Daria Blackwell
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Attached is a list of completed transits of the NW Passage as of 2019.  As far as I know, there was only one completed transit by a pleasure craft in 2020, the year of the pandemic when Canada closed its borders, which was by Peter Smith.  He not only transited the Passage, Kiwi Roa challenged Canadian restrictions to innocent passage rights.

"His successful transit marks the first time that a vessel invoked innocent passage and navigated through the Northwest Passage in defiance of explicit Canadian disapproval. Canada’s claim of effective control will now always have the Kiwi Roa asterisk hanging over it."

I was following Peter the entire way last year and wrote about it in my blog. He did it without ever going ashore and sailing much more of the distance than most.

Meanwhile, in February, Canada announced a one-year ban on pleasure craft transiting the NW Passage.

What a long strange year it's been.

Vice Commodore, OCC 
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northwestpassage.pdf (1K views, 1.00 MB)
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Bill Balme
Bill Balme
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Richard Hudson - 8 Jul 2021
Bill Balme - 7 Jul 2021
Is the NW Passage Canadian or International waters?
If the latter as is claimed by Peter, it seems to me the Canadians had no right to close it.
If Canadian, then by all means, they should be free to keep everyone out.

Whether the Northwest Passage (or parts of it) is in Canadian waters seems the crux of the issue, and the answer is that it's disputed (the Lawfare link in Daria's original post explains this well).

So it's not clear that Canada can legally control transits of the NW Passage.

While I agree that cruisers absolutely should respect the laws and customs of the places they visit, I think Peter Smith was put in a difficult situation.  
He had been in contact with the Canadian government, which had initially said that non-stop transits were acceptable ("Foreign pleasure craft exercising the right of innocent passage").

The Canadian government then reversed that and told Peter Smith six days after he left Nome, that he was not going to be allowed to transit the NW Passage ( https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/north/new-zealand-yacht-cambridge-bay-nunavut-1.5698347 ).

Six days after leaving Nome would have put Peter a fair ways into the NW Passage (which is generally considered to start in the Bering Strait, between Alaska and Russia), somewhere along the north coast of Alaska.

From a position off the north coast of Alaska, to be told by a country that has just reversed it's decision, on allowing transit through waters that may or may not be part of that country, should one abort and head for Panama?   

Would the Panama Canal be open by the time one got there, or could it have locked down for Covid?
Would it be better to sail nonstop (in case Chile locked down) for Cape Horn instead?
Or, as a foreigner on a foreign yacht, to ask the USA for permission to stay in Alaska until Covid was over?

Again, I absolutely do agree that cruisers should respect the laws and customs of the countries they visit and 'leave a clean wake', but I think in this case, there were extenuating circumstances.  

Interestingly, we arrived in Santa Maria, Azores a few days ago, and there's this substantial expedition aluminium boat tied to one of the docks - and on closer examination I see that it's Peter Smith's Kiwi Roa!

So we invited Peter (as well as another OCC boat - Asante) over to Toodle-oo! last night for sundowners - and of course I asked Peter about his recent experience in the NWP.

He's quite clear in his own mind that the NWP is an international waterway - which the Canadians appear to be trying to annex into Canadian Territory, but that many countries - including the UK dispute.

Richard, your summary seems to be right on the money in terms of timing involved in Canada's sudden refusal of passage - and clearly was an onerous task for Peter to adhere to. Instead, he ploughed on, following all normal guidance, including twice daily contact with the Canadian authorities and made it through unscathed, with zero interaction with the locals.

It's somewhat reasonable that the Canadians have something of a say in how the passage is navigated, but it seems to me that they have zero right to prevent a boat from making the passage. The argument that the Canadian CG is exposed unnecessarily, also feel highly bogus, when one considers for example the number of boats present in the NWP compared to, for example, the number of foreign boats the New Zealand CG has to rescue on an annual basis around their international waters.

Anyway, Peter has been fined by the Canadians and is fighting it forthrightly - and is likely to gain backing from various governments that are not willing to allow Canada to quietly annex the NWP as their own territory. Good luck to him!





Bill Balme
s/v Toodle-oo!

Richard Hudson
Richard Hudson
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Bill Balme: So we invited Peter (as well as another OCC boat - Asante) over to Toodle-oo! last night for sundowners - and of course I asked Peter about his recent experience in the NWP.

Interesting that you got to hear Peter's story directly.   I'm sorry to hear that Canada has fined him (I only knew that fines were threatened).  


Daria Blackwell
Daria Blackwell
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Bill Balme - 24 Jul 2021
Richard Hudson - 8 Jul 2021
Bill Balme - 7 Jul 2021
Is the NW Passage Canadian or International waters?
If the latter as is claimed by Peter, it seems to me the Canadians had no right to close it.
If Canadian, then by all means, they should be free to keep everyone out.

Whether the Northwest Passage (or parts of it) is in Canadian waters seems the crux of the issue, and the answer is that it's disputed (the Lawfare link in Daria's original post explains this well).

So it's not clear that Canada can legally control transits of the NW Passage.

While I agree that cruisers absolutely should respect the laws and customs of the places they visit, I think Peter Smith was put in a difficult situation.  
He had been in contact with the Canadian government, which had initially said that non-stop transits were acceptable ("Foreign pleasure craft exercising the right of innocent passage").

The Canadian government then reversed that and told Peter Smith six days after he left Nome, that he was not going to be allowed to transit the NW Passage ( https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/north/new-zealand-yacht-cambridge-bay-nunavut-1.5698347 ).

Six days after leaving Nome would have put Peter a fair ways into the NW Passage (which is generally considered to start in the Bering Strait, between Alaska and Russia), somewhere along the north coast of Alaska.

From a position off the north coast of Alaska, to be told by a country that has just reversed it's decision, on allowing transit through waters that may or may not be part of that country, should one abort and head for Panama?   

Would the Panama Canal be open by the time one got there, or could it have locked down for Covid?
Would it be better to sail nonstop (in case Chile locked down) for Cape Horn instead?
Or, as a foreigner on a foreign yacht, to ask the USA for permission to stay in Alaska until Covid was over?

Again, I absolutely do agree that cruisers should respect the laws and customs of the countries they visit and 'leave a clean wake', but I think in this case, there were extenuating circumstances.  

Interestingly, we arrived in Santa Maria, Azores a few days ago, and there's this substantial expedition aluminium boat tied to one of the docks - and on closer examination I see that it's Peter Smith's Kiwi Roa!

So we invited Peter (as well as another OCC boat - Asante) over to Toodle-oo! last night for sundowners - and of course I asked Peter about his recent experience in the NWP.

He's quite clear in his own mind that the NWP is an international waterway - which the Canadians appear to be trying to annex into Canadian Territory, but that many countries - including the UK dispute.

Richard, your summary seems to be right on the money in terms of timing involved in Canada's sudden refusal of passage - and clearly was an onerous task for Peter to adhere to. Instead, he ploughed on, following all normal guidance, including twice daily contact with the Canadian authorities and made it through unscathed, with zero interaction with the locals.

It's somewhat reasonable that the Canadians have something of a say in how the passage is navigated, but it seems to me that they have zero right to prevent a boat from making the passage. The argument that the Canadian CG is exposed unnecessarily, also feel highly bogus, when one considers for example the number of boats present in the NWP compared to, for example, the number of foreign boats the New Zealand CG has to rescue on an annual basis around their international waters.

Anyway, Peter has been fined by the Canadians and is fighting it forthrightly - and is likely to gain backing from various governments that are not willing to allow Canada to quietly annex the NWP as their own territory. Good luck to him!




Hey Bill,
Thanks for sharing this story and getting it directly from Peter. It must have been an interesting encounter.
Cheers,
Daria

Vice Commodore, OCC 
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DariaBlackwell - 23 Jun 2021
Dick - 23 Jun 2021
DariaBlackwell - 24 Jun 2021
Jon.Schwartz - 7 Jul 2021
bbalme - 7 Jul 2021
Dick - 7 Jul 2021
rhudson - 8 Jul 2021
Dick - 8 Jul 2021
rhudson - 8 Jul 2021
bbalme - 24 Jul 2021
rhudson - 25 Jul 2021
DariaBlackwell - 25 Jul 2021
rhudson - 17 Sep 2021

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