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On April 21, 2026, Transport Minister Steven MacKinnon introduced the Canadian Space Launch Act (C-28) in the House of Commons to authorize, regulate and oversee launches and re-entries from Canadian soil.
The proposed law would create the first domestic regulatory framework covering commercial and military launches, amend statutes including the Aeronautics Act and Canada Transportation Act, and establish safety, security, insurance and indemnification requirements.
Ottawa says the move follows funding measures in last year’s budget (including capital for a Nova Scotia spaceport) and recent momentum from NASA’s Artemis II mission featuring Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen.
Government officials argue Canada — the only G7 country without sovereign launch capability — must reduce reliance on foreign providers to retain investment, cut delays and secure critical infrastructure.
Industry players such as Maritime Launch Services (Spaceport Nova Scotia) and NordSpace are developing facilities, and Defence’s Launch the North grants have supported domestic launcher development.
The bill is framed as a step to grow a potentially large commercial sector while addressing aviation and maritime safety, environmental and national-security concerns.







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