Canada: Sky Canada Project final report released
Canada’s Chief Science Advisor Mona Nemer published the final Sky Canada Project report on July 14, 2025, urging a new federal agency for UAP reports. It suggests the Canadian Space Agency lead efforts with partners to standardize investigations and public data access.
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Background
Event Overview
On July 14, 2025, Mona Nemer, Canada’s Chief Science Advisor, issued the concluding document from the Sky Canada Project. This initiative examined public UAP sighting management, highlighting needs for better coordination across agencies.
Key Recommendations
The report advocates forming a dedicated federal entity to unify collection, analysis, and probes of UAP incidents. It nominates the Canadian Space Agency as a reliable lead, partnering with governmental and scholarly groups. Further proposals urge aviation authorities to respond more robustly to pilot UAP submissions, develop anti-misinformation strategies, release records publicly, and deploy data-gathering applications.
Involved Organizations
Several entities regularly handle UAP tips, such as Transport Canada, Department of National Defence, Canadian Space Agency, and Royal Canadian Mounted Police. The project identifies gaps like fragmented reporting systems and limited public involvement.
Significance
This step promotes scientific handling of UAPs, boosts transparency, and counters false narratives, positioning Canada alongside global efforts for structured aerial anomaly studies. Sources: Office of the Chief Science Advisor report (June 14, 2025); CTV News article by Daniel Otis (July 14, 2025).
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