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Canadian small arms production and export.


The value of Canadian exports of small arms small arms, firearms designed primarily to be carried and fired by one person and, generally, held in the hands, as distinguished from heavy arms, or artillery. Early Small Arms


The first small arms came into general use at the end of the 14th cent.
(1) and small arms accessories and components to non-US(2) customers totalled $23 million in 1997, the last year for which figures are available. Most exports, $22 million (or 96%) went to NATO NATO: see North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
NATO
 in full North Atlantic Treaty Organization

International military alliance created to defend western Europe against a possible Soviet invasion.
 countries, with remaining sales divided between other industrial countries ($446,000) and countries in the Third World ($672,000). Individual state recipients, totalling 37 in 1997, are identified in Table 1. The 1997 sales, reported in the Federal Government's annual report on Export of Military Goods from Canada, are down from 1995 and 1996 when the total non-US sales were $31 million and $29 million respectively, with most of the decline owing to owing to
prep.
Because of; on account of: I couldn't attend, owing to illness.

owing to prepdebido a, por causa de 
 reduced sales to NATO customers (see Figure 1).

Table 1
 1997 recipients of Canadian
rsmall arms exports(*)

Country              Value
Andorra              $7,492
Argentina            $54,966
Australia            $155,959
Austria              $9,843
Belgium              $170,030
Chile                $31,317
Czech Republic       $19,825
Denmark              $283,893
Egypt                $61
Finland              $10,642
France               $188,371
Germany              $597,495
Greece               $10,516
Greenland            $13,126
Guyana               $250
Hong Kong            $6,225
Hungary              $1,249
Italy                $224,905
Jordan               $3,856
Luxembourg           $13,015
Netherlands          $20,238,216
New Zealand          $15,167
Norway               $95,202
Philippines          $183,284
Poland               $990
Romania              $884
Slovakia             $3,098
Slovenia             $6,245
South Africa         $15,595
Spain                $92,617
Sweden               $1,986
Switzerland          $220,111
Tanzania             $5,532
Thailand             $362,506
Turkey               $1,679
United Kingdom       $53,868
Zambia               $930
Total                $23,100,946

(*) Small arms contained in Export Control


List Item 2001 only.

Most Canadian small arms exports are variations of the US M-16 automatic rifle, built under licence by Diemaco of Kitchener as the C7 combat rifle, the C7A optically-sighted version of the C7, and the C8 carbine carbine

Light, short-barreled rifle. The first carbines, from the muzzle-loading muskets of the 18th century to the lever-action repeaters of the 19th, were chiefly cavalry weapons or saddle firearms for mounted frontiersmen.
. In 1984 Diemaco received a contract to build the C7 for the Canadian armed forces, and at the time the company was prevented from exporting by provisions of the Criminal Code of Canada The Criminal Code of Canada (long title An Act respecting the criminal law, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-46, as amended) is the codification of most of the criminal offences and procedure in Canada. . The company lobbied for a change in legislation, arguing that it could not in the long run remain economically viable if it had access only to the Canadian defence market. In 1991 the necessary changes were made, despite opposition, and three years later the company received a major contract from the Netherlands. (Figure 1 shows sharp increases in small arms exports in 1994, when sales began.) Diemaco has since supplied the Dutch Army with more than 50,000 automatic rifles worth almost $60 million and has exported rifles to Belgium and Denmark.

Canada has at least three other small arms manufacturers. Para-Ordnance in the Toronto area builds handguns for military, police, and civilian markets. Sporting rifles, primarily for the US market, are built by Savage Arms The Savage Arms Company is a firearms manufacturing company based in New York. The company makes a variety of rimfire and centerfire rifles, as well as marketing the Stevens single-shot rifles and shotguns.  of Lakefield, Ontario Lakefield (population 2400) is a village which is a part of the township of Smith-Ennismore-Lakefield, and Peterborough County, Ontario, although it was formerly a separate village. The Trent-Severn Waterway passes on the west.  and Armament Technology assembles 7.62 mm tactical and sniper rifles Sniper rifles:
Regular 'sniper' rifles. Including scoped variants of regular weapons, dedicated designs, dedicated marksman variants, etc..
  • Accuracy International Arctic Warfare / L96
  • Accuracy International Arctic Warfare AE
 in Halifax. Elcan Optical Technologies ELCAN (Ernst Leitz Canada) is a Canadian optics and electronics company owned by Raytheon.

The company manufactures devices for civilian and military markets. The company has locations in Midland, Ontario, Richardson, Texas and Málaga, Spain.
 in Midland, Ontario specializes in military small arms components and accessories, and another three companies manufacture munitions mu·ni·tion  
n.
War materiel, especially weapons and ammunition. Often used in the plural.

tr.v. mu·ni·tioned, mu·ni·tion·ing, mu·ni·tions
To supply with munitions.
 (see Table 2 for more details).(3)

Table 2

Canadian small arms manufacturers

The following table was compiled by Project Ploughshares
For the agricultural implement, see plowshare, for the anti-nuclear group, see Trident Ploughshares


This article or section needs sources or references that appear in reliable, third-party publications.
 from open sources.

A: SMALL FIRMS MANUFACTURERS

1. Diemaco Inc., Kitchener, Ontario Coordinates:  The City of Kitchener (IPA [ˈkɪ.tʃə.nɝ]) is a city in southwestern Ontario, Canada.  

Designated the Small Arms "Centre of Excellence" by the Canadian Department of National Defence, Diemaco was proclaimed to be "the firearms-production capital of Canada Noun 1. capital of Canada - the capital of Canada (located in southeastern Ontario across the Ottawa river from Quebec)
Canadian capital, Ottawa

Ontario - a prosperous and industrialized province in central Canada
" when it received a $107 million DND DND Drag and Drop
DND Department of National Defence (Canada & Australia)
DND Do Not Disturb
DND Dungeons and Dragons
DND Den Norske Dataforening
DND Direct Nanoparticle Deposition
DND Drugs for Neglected Diseases
 contract to supply automatic rifles and carbines in 1984. In 1994 the company landed a $50 million contract with the Netherlands military to supply C7 rifles, followed in 1995 and 1996 by Danish orders worth $13 million. Diemaco also has exported automatic weapons and components to Belgium, New Zealand New Zealand (zē`lənd), island country (2005 est. pop. 4,035,000), 104,454 sq mi (270,534 sq km), in the S Pacific Ocean, over 1,000 mi (1,600 km) SE of Australia. The capital is Wellington; the largest city and leading port is Auckland. , and the US, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 company and media reports, and has had additional "export experience" in Australia, Papua New Guinea Papua New Guinea (păp`ə, –y , Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia (sä`dē ərā`bēə, sou`–, sô–), officially Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, kingdom (2005 est. pop. , and the UK, according to Industry Canada Industry Canada is the department of the Government of Canada with responsibility for regional economic development, investment, and innovation/research and development. The department employs 6104 FTEs across Canada.  (Industry Canada "Canadian Company Capabilities" at website http://strategis.ic.gc.ca/).

Diemaco produces the C7 Combat Rifle (a version of the US Colt M-16), the C7A1 Combat Rifle (an optically-sighted version of the C7), the C8 Carbine (a C-7 with a telescoping stock and a shorter barrel), and the C10 training rifle. The company is a division of Devtek Corporation, based in Markham, Ontario.

From 1981 Diemaco lobbied the government to change the Criminal Code so that it could export automatic rifles, contributing to 1991 legislative changes creating an Automatic Firearms Country Control List of prescribed countries eligible to order automatic weapons from Canada.

2. Para-Ordnance Manufacturing Inc., Scarborough, Ontario

Para-Ordnance manufactures and sells handguns - a range of 9 mm, .40- and .45-calibre pistols. According to company material, Para-Ordnance is the originator of the "high magazine capacity" .45-calibre pistol, and "offers a wide range of quality engineered products for the law enforcement, military, and civilian markets" ("About Us" from the company website, www.paraord.com/). Para-Ordnance supplies domestic customers, including Canadian police forces, private sports shooters and hunters, and ships handguns out of the country, reporting export sales exceeding $500,000 in a company report to Industry Canada in 1998. In 1996, Para-Ordnance received an export permit to sell about 200 handguns worth just over $100,000 to police in Thailand, according to media reports. The company also claims "export experience" in over 20 countries, including South Africa, Philippines, Argentina, Chile, Venezuela, and all states in the United States.

3. Savage Arms (Canada) Inc., Lakefield, Ontario

Savage Arms (Canada) produces .22-calibre long rifles and sporting fire rifles, including those used for target shooting and biathlon biathlon (bīăth`lŏn), sport in which cross-country skiers race across hilly terrain, occasionally stopping to shoot with rifles at sets of fixed targets. The biathlon features the 10-km (6.  events. Formerly the Canadian-owned Lakefield Arms, the company is now a subsidiary of the Massachusetts-based Savage Sports Corporation. According to company officials, Savage Arms exports 97 per cent of its rifles, mostly to the US (Testimony of Mr. Barrie King, Vice-President and General Manager, to the House of Commons House of Commons: see Parliament.  Standing Committee on Justice and Legal Affairs, November 24, 1997).

4. Armament Technology, Halifax, Nova Scotia For other uses, see Halifax.
Halifax, Nova Scotia may refer to any of the following:
  • Halifax Regional Municipality, capital of Nova Scotia, Canada
 

Armament Technology sells Canadian-assembled 7.62 mm tactical and sniper rifles to military, police and civilian customers. The Canadian-owned company also distributes associated firearms equipment such as optical sights and rifle stocks and provides refits, including rebarreling, of police and military sniper rifles. Armament Technology has reported sales to Canadian and US police forces as well as exports to Australia.

B: SMALL ARMS AMMUNITION Ammunition for small arms, i.e., all ammunition up to and including 20 millimeters (.787 inches).  MANUFACTURERS

1. SNC SNC St Norbert College (De Pere, Wisconsin)
SNC Sistema Nervioso Central
SNC Société en Nom Collectif (French: Partnership)
SNC Système Nerveux Central (French: central nervous system) 
 Industrial Technologies Inc, Le Gardeur, Quebec Le Gardeur was a town in southwestern Quebec, Canada on the L'Assomption River in the Regional County Municipality of L'Assomption, and connected to Montreal by Route 138, Autoroute 40, and VIA Rail on the Canadian National rail line.  

A division of the SNC-Lavalin Group of Montreal, SNC Industrial Technologies produces a range of small arms ammunition, including 5.56 mm, 7.62 mm, 9 mm, .50- and .303-calibre rounds as well as small arms training ammunition for military, special forces, and police in Canada and abroad. The Canadian Department of National Defence is the company's largest customer by far, awarding regular multi-million dollar orders for small arms ammunition. (In 1996, for example, DND placed a $180 million order for "ammunition through 30 mm" with the company.) SNC has also exported training ammunition to the US Navy and Army, the US Federal Bureau of Investigation Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), division of the U.S. Dept. of Justice charged with investigating all violations of federal laws except those assigned to some other federal agency. , and the French Ministry of Defence. In reports to Industry Canada, the company cites "export experience" with over 30 other countries, including Albania, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Ecuador, 0man, Russia, Thailand and the former Yugoslavia. SNC Industrial Technologies also has supplied 81 mm mortar cartridges and, before 1992, "Elsie" anti-personnel landmines to the Canadian Army.

2. Royal Canadian Cartridge and Munitions Corp., North Vancouver, British Columbia

Royal Canadian Cartridge and Munitions produces shotshells, .22-calibre rimfire rounds, and other small arms ammunition. It is a Canadian-owned company.

3. Challenger Ammunition, Sainte-Justine-de-Newton, Quebec

Challenger Ammunition produces shotshells, and firearms ammunition, including bullets, and centrefire and rimfire rounds. According to Industry Canada, the company reported no export sales, although it is "actively pursuing" many foreign markets.

C: SMALL ARMS COMPONENT MANUFACTURES

1. ELCAN Optical Technologies, Midland, Ontario

ELCAN produces optical sights for military small arms use, including sights with night vision capability. The company, now a division of the US-based Raytheon Systems Company, also produces optical systems for mortars and the Eryx anti-tank weapon. ELCAN has sold thousands of sights to the Canadian military -- in 1992 DND ordered 6,750 optical sights worth $5 million for C9 light machine guns and 55,000 sights worth $20 million for C7 combat rifles. Additional military customers include Australia and the UK. In 1998 the US Army ordered ELCAN telescopic sights for 5.56 mm and 7.62 mm machine guns in an initial $200,000 order that could lead to sales totalling $6 million.

Export regulations

Small arms exports are controlled through the Export and Import Permits Act (EIPA EIPA European Institute of Public Administration (Netherlands)
EIPA Educational Interpreter Performance Assessment
EIPA Ethyl-isopropylamiloride
EIPA External Ip Address
) administered by Canada's Department of Foreign Affairs. Along with other military goods, small arms appear on the Export Control List and require export permits before shipment from Canada to any non-US destination. (US shipments are exempt from the export permit process under US-Canada Defence Production Sharing Arrangements.) The 1991 legislation permitting exports of automatic rifles restricts exports to countries on the Automatic Firearms Country Control List (AFCCL). To be eligible for the AFCCL, a country must have a defence development relationship with Canada, although it appears that such a relationship is readily established if a sale is imminent or threatened. (When GM Canada sold light armoured vehicles equipped with US-made machine guns to Saudi Arabia, the defence relationship was arranged and Saudi Arabia was added to the AFCCL to allow the sale to go through.)

In 1996, following an internal departmental review, Foreign Minister Lloyd Axworthy announced an intention to tighten export controls. His instructions to department officials included exercising "the strictest controls over the export of firearms and other potentially lethal equipment to satisfy me that gun control laws and practices in recipient countries are adequate to ensure that Canadian firearms do not find their way into the illicit arms trade nor fuel local violence" (DFAIT DFAIT Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade (Canada)  1996).

When the domestic gun control regulations of the 1995 Firearms Act come into full effect, all firearms exports will require both export permits and authorization by provincial firearms officers or the RCMP registrar. Reinforced by obligations under the 1997 Organization of American States Organization of American States (OAS), international organization, created Apr. 30, 1948, at Bogotá, Colombia, by agreement of Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti,  (OAS OAS

See: Option adjusted spread
) convention on illicit firearms trafficking, expected to be in place in Canada by early 2000, the export requirements will extend to US shipments. As of Canadian ratification of the OAS Convention, export permits will be required for firearms sales to the US.

(1) While varying definitions of small arms are used, Canadian export figures used here are based on Item 2001 of Canada's Export Control List consisting of "small arms and automatic weapons such as pistols, revolvers and rifles, including certain firearms for sporting and competition purposes and accessories" (DFAIT 1998, p. 31). Currently, most reported export sales are for military use, but police weapons and sporting guns are also included in the government statistics.

(2) Because military exports to the US do not require export permits, statistics for US sales are not maintained.

(3) The current international focus on efforts to control "small arms and light weapons" uses a broader definition than the small arms defined by Canada's Item 2001 of the Export Control List (ECL (Emitter-Coupled Logic) A digital circuit composed of bipolar transistors in which the emitter ends are wired together. ECL gates switch faster than TTL gates, but consume more power. See TTL, I2L and bipolar.

1.
). For example, the definition of the 1997 report of the UN Governmental Experts on Small Arms includes pistols, rifles, light and heavy machine guns, and portable grenade launchers, anti-aircraft guns, anti-tank guns and mortars. Canadian exports of items considered to be "light weapons" are accounted for in ECL categories beyond Item 2001 (e.g., Item 2004 includes bombs, rockets and missiles and related equipment). These light weapons are not the subject of this report. Also, ammunition exports for Item 2001 small arms are reported in Item 2003 of the ECL. Because Item 2003 statistics do not distinguish small calibre ammunition exports from shipments of larger calibre munitions, it is not possible to include ammunition in the value of Canadian small arms exports.

References

DFAIT (Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade) 1996, "Notes for an address by the Minister," June 18.

DFAIT 1998, Export of Military Goods from Canada: Annual Report 1997.
COPYRIGHT 1999 Project Ploughshares
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1999, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Ploughshares Monitor
Date:Sep 1, 1999
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