The Province

B.C. chief says one big spill could end way of life

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OTTAWA — Leaders from several north-coast B.C. First Nations say if the Senate doesn’t approve a bill banning super-sized oil tankers from the region, their thriving but fragile marine-based economies will die.

The bill is already a sore point between the federal government and Alberta. Indigenous communitie­s also disagree on the ban: nearly three dozen First Nations are behind a $16-billion pipeline proposal that has no future if supertanke­rs can’t carry Fort McMurray oil from the port in Prince Rupert.

Marilyn Slett, chief of the Heiltsuk Nation and president of the Coastal First Nations alliance of nine B.C. bands, said Tuesday that coastal B.C. nations have been speaking out against tankers in their waters for decades.

“We are salmon people, we are ocean people and our way of life depends on a healthy ecosystem,” she said.

That ecosystem could be destroyed by a single major oil spill, the risk of which she says is significan­t if massive oil tankers are not legally banned from the narrow passages along the B.C. coast between the north tip of Vancouver Island and the Alaska border.

“If we experience­d a major oil spill we would be finished,” said Slett.

Garry Reece, the hereditary chief of the Allied Tribes of Lax Kw’alaams, said coastal First Nations have a multimilli­on-dollar marine economy that would be upended if an oil tanker ran aground.

“We can’t afford to let anything happen like having an oil spill,” he said. “All the resources we have in our area would be gone.”

Slett led a delegation of B.C. chiefs to Ottawa this week to lobby senators to pass bill C-48, which would enact into law a voluntary moratorium on major tankers that has been in place since the 1980s. The bill would allow for liquid natural gas to be transporte­d on big tankers through the region, but crude oil and related products could only be carried in amounts less than 12,500 tonnes, or about 90,000 barrels.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau ordered a ban on supertanke­rs off the north coast of British Columbia just days after being sworn into

office in November 2015, though legislatio­n to carry out the order wasn’t introduced until May 2017. Bill C-48 took a year to pass the House of Commons and is now in the Senate, where it is getting a mixed ride.

 ?? — THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Tug boats prepare an oil tanker to go under the Second Narrows bridge after it left Kinder Morgan marine terminal in Burrard Inlet last May. A tanker moratorium is still in effect on the province’s north coast.
— THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Tug boats prepare an oil tanker to go under the Second Narrows bridge after it left Kinder Morgan marine terminal in Burrard Inlet last May. A tanker moratorium is still in effect on the province’s north coast.

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