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Canada Extends Probe of Space Sale to Alliant Tech

Reuters
Mar 20, 2008

Industry Minister Jim Prentice (pm.gc.ca)

OTTAWA—Canada said Thursday it would extend its investigation of the proposed sale of two Canadian space firms to U.S. ammunition and rocket maker Alliant Techsystems Inc, a deal that critics say could endanger national sovereignty.

Industry Minister Jim Prentice initially had until March 22 to decide whether to allow MacDonald, Dettwiler and Associates Ltd (MDA) to sell a unit that makes robotics for the International Space Station.

Also included in the sale are a range of satellite technology and land-based data processing centers, some of which are used by the Canadian government. These include the high-tech Radarsat 2 satellite, launched last December.

Opponents say selling the units to a U.S. company could result in Washington denying Ottawa access to sensitive data from the satellite, such as images revealing whether U.S. ships were sailing through Canada's Arctic waters.

A spokeswoman for Prentice said the industry ministry had sent a letter to Alliant Thursday saying the review period would be extended by 30 days from March 19. The deal is worth around US$1.325 billion.

Ottawa is obliged to review all proposed foreign purchases of Canadian companies worth C$270 million ($262 million) or more. It has never vetoed a deal.

"The sale will give Washington the power to deny Ottawa access to vital imaging information from our own satellite," said Steven Staples, president of the Rideau Institute think-tank in Ottawa.

The institute sent Prentice a letter Thursday urging him to block the sale.

Critics are also unhappy about the sale of the robotics unit, pointing out that it has received more than C$400 million in government investment over the years.

MDA built the Dextre maintenance robot that was installed on the International Space Station last week.

($1=$1.03 Canadian)



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