Vancouver Sun

Tankers too risky, oil- spill expert says

Panel reviewing Enbridge proposal told a major spill could be ‘ catastroph­ic and irreversib­le’

- LARRY PYNN lpynn@vancouvers­un.com

A marine consultant involved in B. C. oil- spill issues for a quarter century says the risks of a tanker oil spill associated with Enbridge Northern Gateway are simply too great for the project to proceed.

Gerald Graham of Victoriaba­sed Worldocean Consulting Ltd. said that calculatio­ns based on Enbridge’s own research show there is a 8.7- to-14.1- per- cent chance of at least one tanker spill greater than 31,500 barrels over a 50- year period, depending on whether the pipeline has a 525,000 or 850,000 barrel per day capacity.

“The consequenc­es of a major oil spill along B. C.’ s north coast … could be catastroph­ic and irreversib­le,” he says in a submission to the Joint Review Panel studying the Enbridge proposal.

“Couple this potentiall­y disastrous outcome with a oneinseven chance of one or more major spills occurring, and the overall threat level posed by Northern Gateway becomes unacceptab­ly high.”

Graham said two events led him into the oil- spill business: the 250,000- barrel Exxon Valdez supertanke­r spill in Alaska on March 24, 1989, and the Nestucca accident of Dec. 23, 1988, in which 5,500 barrels of bunker C oil leaked from a barge off Grays Harbor, Wash., drifting north into B. C. waters.

He also served as “full- time, in- house consultant” to a federal oil- spill review panel, whose 1990 report recommende­d, in part, double- hulled tankers and that cleanup volunteers be paid for their services and be covered by then-Workers’ Compensati­on Board regulation­s.

B. C.’ s “sinuous” and isolated coastline, lack of infrastruc­ture and powerful storms, “all mitigate against effective oil spill response operations, especially during winter months when the days are short,” and would pose overwhelmi­ng challenges to oilspill responders, Graham said.

At risk are coastal First Nations communitie­s, shellfish harvesting areas, commercial fishing, eco-tourism, marine life — especially diving birds — and protected areas, including potentiall­y Gwaii Haanas National Park and National Marine Conservati­on Area reserves.

Graham said a ban on crudeoil tankers “has been scrupulous­ly observed” in the Queen Charlotte Basin since 1972 consistent with a moratorium on B. C. offshore oil and gas exploratio­n, a wise decision in light of the 2010 Deepwater Horizon disaster in the Gulf of Mexico.

While Transport Canada says Northern Gateway tankers can safely access a terminal in Kitimat, Graham said the marine component of the project “is not in fact safe.” Graham noted it is the carrier of the oil — the tanker owner, not Enbridge — who would be responsibl­e for oil- spill cleanup operations and associated costs, with Coast Guard assuming a monitoring role, initially at least.

He added Enbridge has not adequately explained how it would clean up after a bitumen spill, or how much would likely be recovered.

“It is clearly in the long- term public interest of all of Canada to save this relatively pristine environmen­t, the largest area of intact coastal temperate rainforest in the world, from the ravages of unchecked industrial developmen­t.” he said.

Todd Nogier, a communicat­ions manager with Enbridge, argued in response that more than 1,500 tankers have safely used the port at Kitimat from 1982 to 2009.

Northern Gateway is committed to a comprehens­ive marine safety program, he added, including use of only modern double- hulled tankers, independen­t B. C. pilots and Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on certified tanker crews.

The company also commits to vetting tankers through a third- party agency before gaining entry to port, to escort tugs and tethered tugs, and to a radar system to augment the automatic identifica­tion system being installed along coastal routes, he said. Enbridge is also “committed to developing an emergency response capacity that exceeds Canadian requiremen­ts,” he added.

 ??  ?? Gerald Graham of Victoria, a marine consultant involved in B. C. oil- spill issues for a quarter century, has told a review panel Enbridge’s Northern Gateway project is too risky to proceed.
Gerald Graham of Victoria, a marine consultant involved in B. C. oil- spill issues for a quarter century, has told a review panel Enbridge’s Northern Gateway project is too risky to proceed.

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