North

Mackenzie Valley Fibre Link brings opportunities, challenges to N.W.T.

A nearly 1,200-kilometre fibre optic line stretching across the Northwest Territories is set to come online, making everything from video streaming to data collection easier in the Mackenzie Valley.

$82-million, 1,200-km fibre optic line to increase internet speeds in communities across the territory

A map showing the route of the Mackenzie Valley fibre optic line.

A nearly 1,200-kilometre fibre optic line stretching across the Northwest Territories is set to come online, making everything from video streaming to data collection easier in the Mackenzie Valley.   

Territorial and community leaders are in Inuvik, N.W.T., this weekend to celebrate the Mackenzie Valley Fibre Link becoming operational.  

The $82-million fibre optic line has been undergoing performance testing since construction officially wrapped up in late March.

"We're very happy because it gives us a more secure communication line and much bigger potential for future endeavours," said Grant Hood, senior administrative officer with the Town of Inuvik.

"I think in the long run, it's going to be one of those 'if you build it they will come' for certain things that will expand our opportunities."

The fibre optic line runs 1,154 kilometres from McGill Lake, 80 kilometres south of Fort Simpson, to Inuvik. Wrigley, Tulita, Norman Wells and Fort Good Hope are also connected. Approximately 6,500 people live in those communities.  

Tsiigehtchic, Aklavik and Fort McPherson are not, but there's hope those communities will connect to a proposed fibre line up the Dempster Highway in Yukon.
Equipment lays the fibre optic link through the Mackenzie Valley in the Northwest Territories. (David Thurton/CBC)

Fibre lines are much more reliable than microwave relay towers — the current option — because they have more carrying capacity for telecommunications and internet services.

Internet speeds tripled in some communities when the southern part of the fibre optic line came online last December.  

The N.W.T. government says the project will provide state-of-the-art telecommunications for communities in the Mackenzie Valley and Beaufort Delta to help them "modernize their economies."

Hood says faster internet speeds will also make things like online shopping and video streaming easier. Staff at the Inuvik Satellite Station Facility are also excited.

"They are absolutely ecstatic that the line's now been completed," Hood said. "It will allow them to do a lot of real-time data acquisition from the satellites."

'Opportunity to better utilize technology'

Faster internet also benefits youth in the Mackenzie Valley, explained Jordan Peterson, the vice-president of the Gwich'in Tribal Council

With offices in four N.W.T. communities, the Gwich'in Tribal Council relies on digital archiving and web-based exhibits to preserve traditional languages and culture..
Jordan Peterson, vice-president of the Gwich'in Tribal Council, says faster internet could help youth in the Mackenzie Valley access language and cultural apps more easily. (Gwich'in Tribal Council )

Access to faster internet could encourage young people to look at using language revitalization and cultural orientation applications, Peterson said.

"We live in a new world and our young people are so used to using iPads and computers and this only brings more opportunities for them to be able to learn," he said.

"Better connectivity and bandwidth not only helps us with being able to upload information — it also allows us to create new opportunities that are possibly out there.

"It's an opportunity for us to better utilize technology."

Fibre line will also present challenges

But a communications professor at the University of Alberta warns there may be some side effects to faster internet.

"I think there's a lot of challenges," said Rob McMahon, an assistant professor with the school's faculty of extension. "You hear about cyberbullying or inappropriate content.

"As these new tools become available or resources become available, I think there's concerns about how to best manage it," McMahan said. "[Communities] are already thinking about it and they're already talking about it."

McMahon said he's worried a "flood" of English content could present challenges for Indigenous languages.

Those challenges are balanced out by a number of opportunities, however.

McMahon says innovation can happen anywhere, which is why he'll be looking to see if communities create their own internet service providers or community networks.

McMahon will host a digital literacy workshop at the Gwich'in Tribal Council's office in Inuvik on Monday.

Meanwhile, Sunday's ceremony marking the completion of the Mackenzie Valley Fibre Line will take place at the Aurora Research Institute starting at 4 p.m.