Toronto Star

Potential oil spill would cost Vancouver $1.2B, report says

Ocean-dependent economy that relies on tourism, fishing ‘could experience losses’

- LAURA KANE THE CANADIAN PRESS

Vancouver’s economy could suffer a $1.2-billion blow in the event of a major oil spill caused by Kinder Morgan’s Trans Mountain pipeline expansion, concludes a new report released by the city.

The report compiled by the University of B.C.’s Fisheries Economics Research Unit examined the potential economic costs of a 16-million litre spill in Burrard Inlet.

Researcher­s looked at the performanc­e of five ocean-dependent activities that are closely linked to the marine environmen­t, including commercial fishing, port activities, inner harbour transporta­tion, tourism and recreation.

The report found that these activities directly employ 4 per cent of the city’s population and contribute more than $3 billion in gross domestic product to Vancouver’s economy every year.

“Ocean-dependent economic activities in Vancouver encompass only a portion of the local economy that could experience losses from a hydrocarbo­n spill in the Burrard Inlet. Still, the potential impacts of an oil spill run into hundreds of million dollars,” the report said.

The city of Vancouver is publishing a series of reports critical of the Trans Mountain expansion leading up to its submission of evidence to the National Energy Board next week, which is reviewing the pipeline project.

Kinder Morgan hopes to triple its bitumen-carrying capacity to 890,000 barrels a day by laying almost 1,000 kilometres of new pipe near the existing pipeline that runs from Alberta to Burnaby, B.C.

The expansion would increase the number of oil tankers in Burrard Inlet to 34 per month from five, according to the city.

Kinder Morgan did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

The report, which was commission­ed by the city and released Friday, analyzed two spill scenarios in Burrard Inlet — in May and in October.

It found the economy could suffer more than double the economic losses in spring during peak tourist season.

Aspill in May could cause total losses ranging from $380 million to $1.23 billion, without counting the cost of recovery and cleanup, it concluded.

The city also released a separate modelling animation showing the movement of oil following a hypothetic­al 16-million litre spill near the Second Narrows Bridge on the city’s east side. Time-lapse animation showed multiple black specks, each representi­ng 2,000 litres of oil, spreading toward West Vancouver before flowing back toward Coal Harbour and clinging to the shoreline around Burrard Inlet.

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