Vancouver Sun

Ship that carried Tamil migrants to be dismantled

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The MV Sun Sea carried nearly 500 Tamil migrants to Canada eight years ago, but now the rusting cargo ship sits forlornly on the B.C. coast — an unwanted vessel of toxins including asbestos, PCBs and mould, documents reveal.

The federal government, which has been stuck with the rickety ship for years, is looking for an environmen­tally sound and costeffect­ive way of getting rid of it.

The Public Services and Procuremen­t Department recently issued a request for feedback from industry on how to dismantle and dispose of the 38-year-old steel ship with an infamous past.

Organizers of the MV Sun Sea’s 2010 voyage from strife-torn Sri Lanka promised passage in return for $20,000 to $30,000 per person.

Federal authoritie­s intercepte­d the vessel, which has been moored at a Public Services facility in Delta since 2012. No owner of the ship could be identified, and no one wanted to buy it.

The vessel, under control of the Canada Border Services Agency, has cost the government approximat­ely $970,000 in storage and maintenanc­e costs.

The border agency and other federal partners “are working diligently” to figure out how to dispose of the ship, says a March 2018 briefing note obtained through the Access to Informatio­n Act.

The request for industry feedback is the first step toward unloading the 52-metre floating lemon.

The solicitati­on documents say the government hopes to ask for bids from disposal companies in August and award a contract the following month, with a project completion date of March.

A January 2016 examinatio­n revealed several hazardous materials on board the MV Sun Sea, including mould, asbestos, lead-laden paint, PCBs in paint and cabling coating, mercury in gauges and fluorescen­t lamps, and radioactiv­e substances in smoke detectors and navigation equipment.

The detailed draft work statement says the contractor must remove and dispose of the potentiall­y dangerous materials while following applicable regulation­s.

In addition, there must be an environmen­tal contingenc­y plan to deal with petroleum product leaks in the water or on the ground, seepage of ozone-depleting substances or catastroph­es such as a fire or an explosion.

The government will not allow a contractor to tow it to a work site beyond the waters of southern British Columbia.

Any company hired to do the dismantlin­g will not be permitted to sell it to a broker.

However, the documents suggest a winning bidder might be able to salvage the main engine, generator, pumps, steel, valves, pipes, hatches, portholes and furniture.

The federal government is going about the project the right way from an ethical and environmen­tal standpoint, said Darren Webster, senior project manager for ship recycling with R.J. MacIsaac Constructi­on Ltd.

Ensuring the MV Sun Sea is disposed of in Canada under rigorous controls is “much better than this vessel ending up in Bangladesh or India or somewhere,” he said.

“It’s the only way that it can be done.”

 ?? DOUGLAS QUAN ?? The MV Sun Sea, which brought 500 Sri Lankan migrants to B.C.in 2010, remains at a federal dock in Delta. It has cost taxpayers $970,000 for storage and maintenanc­e.
DOUGLAS QUAN The MV Sun Sea, which brought 500 Sri Lankan migrants to B.C.in 2010, remains at a federal dock in Delta. It has cost taxpayers $970,000 for storage and maintenanc­e.

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