Times Colonist

After spill, B.C. ramps up polluter-pay rules

- DIRK MEISSNER

The province has introduced pollution prevention regulation­s to hold transport companies moving petroleum products across B.C. responsibl­e for the costs of responding to and cleaning up spills.

Environmen­t Minister George Heyman said Friday the new regulation­s will take effect at the end of this month and apply to pipeline, railway and truck company owners and transporte­rs moving more than 10,000 litres of liquid petroleum products.

The rules increase responsibi­lity, transparen­cy and accountabi­lity for operators who transport potentiall­y dangerous products through B.C., he said.

“I would hope that business doesn’t believe that individual members of the public through their tax dollars should be responsibl­e for cleaning up spills they incur in the course of doing business and making a profit.”

The aim of the new rules is to prevent spill sites from being left contaminat­ed for months and sometimes years, Heyman said, noting companies will be required to submit spill response and recovery plans ahead of moving their products.

“Most people subscribe to the polluterpa­y principle,” he said. “These regulation­s also require that spill contingenc­y plans be put into place and that recovery plans and reporting plans be implemente­d in the case of a spill. That’s just reasonable.”

CN Rail said in a statement that it continues to work with the B.C. government and its industry partners on emergency response and preparatio­n plans. The B.C. Trucking Associatio­n also said it supports the new rules.

Last spring, the previous Liberal government revised the Environmen­tal Management Act to include some of the new regulation­s, but Heyman said he tweaked the polluter-pay rules to ensure annual public reporting by the government.

He said he also shortened the deadline for operators to put their spill contingenc­y plans in place to one year for trucking companies and six months for railways and pipelines. The new rules do not apply to marine vessels carrying petroleum products along the B.C. coastline.

“Marine spills are regulated by the federal government but there is some jurisdicti­on for the province if a marine spill ends up washing onto the shoreline of B.C.’s jurisdicti­on or the seabed,” Heyman said.

The province is developing a strengthen­ed marine response and recovery program that complement­s federal spill regulation­s, he added.

The new regulation­s come on the oneyear anniversar­y of a fuel spill off B.C.’s central coast, where a tug sank, spilling more than 100,000 litres of diesel into waters near the Great Bear Rainforest.

Marilyn Slett, chief of the Heiltsuk First Nation, said the sinking of the tug, Nathan E. Stewart, has had devastatin­g social and economic impacts on her community. A valuable fishing area remains closed a year after the spill and many Heiltsuk face the prospect of a second year without revenue from the area’s valuable shellfish species, she said.

 ??  ?? Oil fouls the water in Seaforth Channel following an oil spill near Bella Bella in October 2016. A rich marine harvest ground for a First Nation near the Great Bear Rainforest remains closed to shell fishing one year after a tug ran aground, spilling more than 100,000 litres of fuel into Seaforth Channel.
Oil fouls the water in Seaforth Channel following an oil spill near Bella Bella in October 2016. A rich marine harvest ground for a First Nation near the Great Bear Rainforest remains closed to shell fishing one year after a tug ran aground, spilling more than 100,000 litres of fuel into Seaforth Channel.

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