The Standard (St. Catharines)

Great Lakes shipping rules ‘unfavourab­le’

U.s.-based shippers say proposed standards for ballast water are unfair

- JAMES MCCARTEN

Just weeks before North America’s new trade agreement is due to take effect, regulators in the United States have launched a formal investigat­ion into Canada’s plan to change the rules that govern shipping on the Great Lakes.

U.s.-based shippers say proposed new standards for the use and release of ballast water — extra weight to improve the stability of vessels that have unloaded their cargo — are unfair, excessivel­y expensive and designed to undermine competitio­n in the business of ferrying goods across the world’s largest collection of freshwater lakes.

Transport Canada introduced the new rules last summer to meet the demands of an Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on treaty that took effect in 2017 aimed at limiting the spread of harmful or invasive species — a treaty to which the United States is not a party.

In a petition filed in March with the U.S. Federal Maritime Commission, the Lake Carriers’ Associatio­n, which represents 13 firms with 46 U.s.flagged “lakers” capable of transporti­ng 81 million tonnes each year, accused Canada of seeking a competitiv­e advantage.

The associatio­n argues that “the proposed regulation­s are not mandated by the IMO treaty, that compliance with the Canadian performanc­e standard would be cost-prohibitiv­e for its members, and that the proposed regulation­s are intended to drive U.S. operators from the cross-lakes trade,” the commission said in announcing the investigat­ion.

The regulation­s, if passed, would require modern ballastwat­er treatment systems on all vessels operating in Canadian waters, and that shipping companies develop management plans in accordance with stringent new performanc­e standards.

The associatio­n estimates the cost of meeting the new requiremen­ts at more than $1.1 billion (Canadian) to preserve access to an estimated 64 million metric tonnes of shipments over the 25-year life of the regulation­s. That, they say, would amount to a doubling of their freight rates, rendering them unable to compete with their Canadian counterpar­ts.

“Member U.S. laker operators would be unable to bear the increased cost of such regulation­s and stay competitiv­e and thus would have to exit that trade,” the associatio­n writes in its petition.

“Canadian vessel operators would directly benefit from the exit of U.S. lakers from that trade by taking over the portion of the trade formerly conducted by U.S. lakers and enjoying a de facto monopoly on crosslakes U.S. export-to-canada water-borne trade.”

Canada, however, insists the proposed regulation­s would treat all shippers equally.

“The approach would apply the same standards to Canadian and U.S. ships that operate together on the Great Lakes. Providing exemptions for U.S. ships would be economical­ly unfair,” said Livia Belcea, press secretary to Transport Minister Marc Garneau.

“Canada’s regulatory initiative is still at the proposal stage. We understand the FMC’S actions as being anticipato­ry in nature and that it is not intending to take actions until Canada confirms its approach.”

The regulation­s do provide an exception to U.S. Great Lakes vessels, provided they don’t “load or release” ballast in Canadian waters. But operators of U.s.-flagged vessels transporti­ng shipments to Canada say they would have no choice but to load Canadian ballast — water that wouldn’t be released until the vessel was back in the U.S.

“Loading ballast water in Canadian waters, as opposed to dischargin­g it, does not result in the potential introducti­on of non-native organisms into Canadian waters,” the associatio­n argues.

Most of the affected Canadian vessels also carry shipments beyond the Great Lakes to other countries, making management systems necessary whether they ship to the U.S. or not. U.S. vessels that are confined to the lakes shouldn’t be held to the same standard, they argue. The only reason to do so, they say, is to gain a competitiv­e advantage.

 ?? FRANK GUNN THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Regulators in the United States have launched a formal investigat­ion into Canada’s plan to change the rules that govern shipping on the Great Lakes.
FRANK GUNN THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Regulators in the United States have launched a formal investigat­ion into Canada’s plan to change the rules that govern shipping on the Great Lakes.

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