Regina Leader-Post

Coast guard on scene as cargo ship drifts off B.C.

- THE CANADIAN PRESS

OLD MASSETT, B.C. — Members of the Canadian Coast Guard are trying to avoid an “environmen­tal issue,” as they attempt to secure a Russian cargo ship drifting in five-metre swells off British Columbia’s northern coast.

Navy Capt. James Clark said Friday evening that the coast guard vessel Gordon Reid was on the scene, but its first attempt to secure a tow line to the Simushir was unsuccessf­ul.

The ship is drifting northwest in stormy seas, away from Haida Gwaii, formerly known as the Queen Charlotte Islands, but coast guard spokesman Roger Girouard said it has no propulsion.

The vessel is carrying mining equipment and unnamed solvents, as well as hundreds of tonnes of bunker and diesel fuel, he said.

“There’s a potential for an environmen­tal issue here,” said Girouard. “We have been already moving assets to the Haida Gwaii region to affect a response.”

Reporters were told the captain was evacuated to Sandspit, located on the eastern side of Haida Gwaii, but they were given no further medical details.

The Canadian Forces’ joint rescue co-ordination centre in Victoria said Simushir lost power late Thursday off Haida Gwaii, as it was making its way from Washington state to Russia.

The Council of the Haida Nation warned the ship could run aground by Friday evening. Haida president Peter Lantin said the council was preparing for the ship to potentiall­y reach land in a remote, rocky section of coastline along the southweste­rn edge of Haida Gwaii, raising the possibilit­y the vessel could break apart.

“I think all efforts are being made to revive the ship and deal with the mechanical failures that have happened, so for us that’s the best-case scenario if they’re able to fix it and keep it from running ashore,” Lantin said. “Right now, there is no optimism that this thing is going to be salvaged. We’re preparing for the worst-case scenario.”

The 135-metre-long vessel is not a tanker but rather a container ship and had 11 crew members on board.

A tugboat from Prince Rupert, on the northern B.C. coast, was expected to arrive by early Saturday morning.

In addition, the United States Coast Guard had a helicopter on standby in the event the entire crew needed to be removed from the ship.

Numerous federal and provincial agencies were involved co-ordinating the response, including the Department of Fisheries and Oceans, Transport Canada and B.C.’s Environmen­t Ministry. Western Canada Marine Response Corp., which is contracted by the federal government to respond to oil spills, said its crews were on standby.

Sub. Lt. Ron MacDougall of the joint rescue co-ordination centre said there were winds of almost 30 kilometres per hour, though he said conditions were easing up. Environmen­t Canada had issued a storm warning for much of the northern coast, including the area around Haida Gwaii.

The Haida Nation set up an emergency command centre in Old Massett, located on the northern tip of Haida Gwaii, in the event the vessel runs aground.

“This is home for us. If this thing runs aground and hits in one of the most culturally sensitive areas of Haida Gwaii, it’s going to have catastroph­ic effects,” Lantin said

The potential for marine disasters along B.C.’s coast has become a particular­ly sensitive subject amid the debate over the proposed Northern Gateway pipeline. The project, if approved, would include a terminal in Kitimat, B.C., and would see tankers carrying heavy crude from Alberta traversing B.C.’s northern coast.

 ?? DND-MARITIME FORCES PACIFIC ?? A Canadian Coast Guard helicopter flies Friday near a Russian container ship carrying fuel and drifting without power in rough seas off British Columbia’s northern coast.
DND-MARITIME FORCES PACIFIC A Canadian Coast Guard helicopter flies Friday near a Russian container ship carrying fuel and drifting without power in rough seas off British Columbia’s northern coast.

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