ENVIRONMENT - LOOKING GLASS NEWS | |
Shipping's Dirty Secret |
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by gaanjah mama Guerilla News Network Entered into the database on Thursday, November 24th, 2005 @ 13:31:41 MST |
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Summary: When Eric Reeves was 10 years old, he would play on the beach at his family’s
home north of the picturesque tourist town of Muskegon, Michigan, halfway up the
eastern shore of Lake Michigan. While building sand castles, Reeves often dug
into a rusty-looking layer of sand on the beach. “What is that?” Reeves
would ask his parents. “Look out there,” they told him, pointing to
the horizon. “It’s from the lakers.” [Posted By gaanjah_mama] ___________________________________ By Alex Roslin Our grimy great lakes: The dirty secrets of the Canadian shipping
industry’s cleanup practices The dirtiest job on the ship was understandably the one Jim Macdonald dreaded
most. During his years as chief engineer for Canada Steamship Lines (CSL), aboard
carriers including the CSL Tadoussac, Macdonald oversaw the offloading of 25,000
tons of iron ore at the Port of Hamilton on each journey. Now 70 and retired,
Macdonald recalls his voyages aboard the 730-foot-long Tadoussac—how,
in the late 1980s, the Tadoussac would head back to the far end of Lake Superior
to pick up a fresh ore load at Thunder Bay. After a short catnap while the vessel
eased through the locks of the Welland Canal, it would be time to clean out
the ship. This meant dumping into the water tens of thousands of marble-sized
ore pellets that didn’t make it off at port. Before the Tadoussac arrived in Thunder Bay, the holds had to be spotless.
All the stray pellets—which mariners call sweepings or spillage—had
to be cleaned out and dumped. The excess pellets would coat the bottom of each
of the five enormous cargo holds. Below the holds was a 650-foot tunnel. Inside
it, two giant conveyor belts would carry the cargo down the length of the ship,
up the unloading tower at the stern, out over a 250-foot discharging boom and
into a concrete well on the Hamilton dock. Half a dozen deckhands would start washing the pellets out of the holds and
into the tunnel. In the bowels of the ship, the tunnelmen had the nastiest task.
Squeezing into the narrow work space between the conveyor belts, their job was
to shovel the stray pellets onto the belts and make sure the machinery in the
tunnel ran smoothly. The tight spaces in the tunnel would be choked with iron-ore
dust; Macdonald says the tunnelmen wore artificial breathing devices. By the time the tunnelmen were done, the Tadoussac would be in Lake Erie. The
ship’s master would swing the boom out over the water and pass Macdonald
the word to have the electrician start the conveyor belts. The belts would whir
into motion, and the sweepings would pour off the boom into the waters of Lake
Erie for half an hour, leaving a trail of iron-ore dust in the ship’s
wake—the only visible sign of the environmental degradation. It was a routine task but, even though he was a seasoned sailor, it never sat
right with Macdonald. He is certainly no tree-hugger, but thinks there must
be an alternative. “It’s been a bone of contention for me for years,”
he says. “They call this spillage. I love the term.” CSL is only one shipping company dumping sweepings into the Great Lakes. Ships
have discharged cargo residue there ever since armadas of ore carriers started
criss-crossing the lakes in the 1870s. No one knows how much has collected on
the lakebeds travelled by major carriers, but cargo sweeping is routine for
the 130 lakers that ply those waters today. Fourteen of these lakers are owned
or operated by CSL, the company held by Paul Martin from 1981 to 1993, when
he became finance minister and transferred management duties to a trustee. Canadian and US shipping companies pump an estimated 2,500 tons of cargo residue
into the lakes each year during 11,000 ship transits, according to a 1999 report
by the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Data from a study
commissioned by the US Coast Guard in 2003 suggests that 80 percent of the dumping
takes place in shipping lanes that pass through sensitive-species habitats.
Its numbers imply that 45,000 to 64,000 tons of cargo—the equivalent of
6,000 to 9,000 garbage-truck loads—has been dumped into the lakes since
the practice started. And nearly all the discharges qualify as pollutants under
guidelines of the Ontario government, according to a 1993 study commissioned
by the Canadian Coast Guard. All three studies warn of potentially serious harm to marine life and the environment
and say more research is urgently needed. Among the worst substances dumped
are petroleum coke, which can be toxic at low doses; coal, which can retard
plant growth and cause wetland damage; and lead ore, which can be poisonous
and contain trace elements of arsenic. What’s more, the studies say cargo sweeping violates laws in both countries—namely
Canada’s Fisheries Act and the US Act to Prevent Pollution from Ships—as
well as an international treaty on ship garbage. “Technically, this has
always been illegal under US law and probably in Canada too,” says Eric
Reeves, a retired US Coast Guard commander. “If you read the law, this
stuff should have been prohibited or subject to a permitting.” But many Canadian environmentalists have never heard of cargo sweeping, and
questions about it leave them stunned. Elizabeth May, executive director of
the Sierra Club of Canada, is amazed when told about the dumping. “If
it is going on in the Great Lakes, it is illegal. The Fisheries Act is very,
very clear. You don’t put anything in the water that is harmful to fish.” Also upset is Toronto-based Mark Mattson, president of Lake Ontario Waterkeeper,
an organization that monitors water quality in the lake. “Are you serious?”
he asks when first informed of the practice. “This is quite a serious
matter. This is our drinking water.” Mattson says federal and provincial
laws lay out strict requirements for permits, monitoring and testing of discharges
and, for violations, huge fines and even the possibility of jail time. The dumping
potentially runs counter to the federal Fisheries Act, Ontario Water Resources
Act and Ontario Public Lands Act, he says. “You can’t put anything
on the bottom of the lake without a permit. There is no way around those laws.” Or is there? Perhaps shipowners have found a way. Even though their vessels
have poured heaps of potential pollutants into the lakes, in possible violation
of a cluster of laws, they haven’t been overrun with angry environmental
inspectors demanding to know what is going on. Of course, the shipping companies
weren’t going to shout from the rooftops about what they were doing. And
cargo residue wouldn’t necessarily show up in tests of water, unless the
water was taken from the middle of a lake, where the dumped material had settled
on the bottom. It seems the regulators have rewritten that old Vegas saying: What happens
in the Great Lakes stays in the Great Lakes. When Eric Reeves was 10 years old, he would play on the beach at his family’s
home north of the picturesque tourist town of Muskegon, Michigan, halfway up
the eastern shore of Lake Michigan. While building sand castles, Reeves often
dug into a rusty-looking layer of sand on the beach. “What is that?”
Reeves would ask his parents. “Look out there,” they told him, pointing
to the horizon. “It’s from the lakers.” Far out over the waves, silhouetted against the western horizon, the 1,000-footers
hauled in the range of 65,000 tons of coal or iron ore from Lake Superior down
to the steel mills of the US industrial heartland. The reddish-brown layer of
sand that clouded Reeves’ childhood vacations on the beach was produced
by taconite, a low-grade ore. The taconite sweepings had drifted 15 kilometres
from the shipping lane to the beach at the Reeves home. Thirty years later, in 1993, Reeves found himself in Cleveland, Ohio, stick-handling
the thorny question of what to do about cargo sweeping. A lawyer, Reeves took
over as chief of staff of the marine environmental branch in the US Coast Guard’s
Ninth District, which regulates shipping and environmental issues in the Great
Lakes. “I was an oddball in the military bureaucracy because I felt like
an environmentalist at heart,” he says. One of the most sensitive files on Reeves’ desk was cargo dumping. It
was already a mess of bureaucratic evasion, political squabbling and thorny
legal questions—the kind of thankless, unwelcome file that, if handled
poorly, could easily end a military career. While the dumping had been an open
secret among mariners for decades, virtually no one outside their small world
had known about it until it was discovered, quite by accident, in the late 1980s.
Eager to try out new sonar gear, scientists at the US National Oceanographic
and Atmospheric Administration decided to do a sonar survey of the underwater
topography of the Great Lakes. They stumbled on something bizarre: footprint-like
clumps with extremely bright acoustic signatures that stood out like neon lights
in the lakebed mud. Divers were sent down to investigate the murky depths, and they reported that
the residue was excess cargo from ships. Chris Wiley was one of the first Canadians
to hear the news from the Americans. “They said, ‘Gee, this is a
bad thing. You really don’t want to disturb this,’” says Wiley,
who works out of Sarnia, Ontario, as a sort of Great Lakes ecology guru for
two federal agencies—Transport Canada and the Department of Fisheries
and Oceans. Around the same time, in 1987, the US government did something that would cause
it years of headaches. It signed the Marpol V accord of the United Nation’s
International Maritime Organization. Marpol V imposes restrictions on dumping
garbage at sea, including cargo residue. Signatories agree not to allow cargo
sweeping in inland waters and to permit it only in the ocean, at least 12 nautical
miles offshore. In 1987, the US Congress adopted the Marpol rules into the Act to Prevent Pollution
from Ships, effectively banning cargo sweeping in the Great Lakes. The US shipping
industry was furious and lobbied for an amendment, saying it was absurd for
cargo ships to be sent 1,000 kilometres out of the lakes, down the St. Lawrence
River and all the way into the ocean to discharge residue. But Congress refused
to amend the law, fearing that pressure would mount to water down other environmental
standards too. This is how things stood when Eric Reeves took over the file. “The lake
carriers said, ‘This thing is going to put us into a fix,’”
he recalls. “I spent long evenings in the office after everyone else had
gone home trying to figure out what kind of fix we had gotten ourselves into.” To make matters worse, the coast guard wasn’t prepared to spend any money
to study the discharges or their impacts, leaving Reeves penniless to act. “I
requested money to study it. There was nada,” says Reeves. “I was
kind of stuck.” He had to rely on shipping companies for information to
help with any decision, and they insisted the amounts being dumped were tiny
and that the sweepings were non-hazardous. Finally, he wrote a memo to his boss saying, “We’ve got a law here
we can’t enforce.” In 1993, with the coast guard’s approval,
Reeves called in a couple of experts on the environment and fisheries, reps
from the US and Canadian shipping industries and government Great Lakes expert
Chris Wiley, representing Ottawa. Reeves sat them down in front of a map. Together,
they wrote a set of rules to make cargo dumping acceptable again—if not
legal. “We were literally sitting down at a map and drawing lines together,”
Reeves says. The new rules would not be actual regulations—because cargo sweeping
was, after all, still against the law—but were enshrined in a Special
Notice to Mariners. Under the “interim” policy—which has been
renewed every five years since, ships could dump cargo anywhere in the lakes,
with a few minor restrictions. Dumping must take place at least 2.6 to 12 nautical
miles from shore, depending on the type of cargo, and not within sensitive zones
like spawning grounds or wetlands. The policy places no restrictions on the
type or amount of cargo dumped; limestone and other clean stone can be dumped
anywhere, even inside the two-mile boundary. “It is an interim enforcement
policy until Congress changes the law,” Reeves says. Now it was the turn of the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and Department
of Justice to be upset. Reeves’ new policy disregarded a law of Congress,
they said, and was itself illegal. “I raised some hackles in Washington
that I was not enforcing the law,” he says. “I had a high-level
guy from the Department of Justice saying I could be put in jail.” Reeves
says he retorted, “I can’t enforce this. It will put them [shipping
companies] out of business.” “If you have to let them do it, can’t you just not talk about it?”
Reeves says the justice official asked him. That bothered Reeves. He thought
they should at least be upfront that the law wasn’t going to be enforced.
That was far better than a dishonest policy of winks and nods. Besides, the
EPA had its own unenforced policies. Under the US Clean Water Act, dumping pollutants
or waste into the lakes is illegal without an EPA permit. What’s more,
Reeves says, the Refuse Act makes it a misdemeanour to discharge refuse into
navigable waters of the US without a permit of the US Army Corps of Engineers.
To get a permit from either agency, shipping companies would have to go through
a lengthy regulatory procedure of monitoring and studying the discharges for
toxicity, without any guarantee of approval. But the EPA wasn’t going after the ships either, Reeves reminded the
justice official. “I got angry with him. I said, ‘Why is the EPA
not shutting the lakers down? It’s illegal under the Clean Water Act.
Why don’t you shut them down?’” The official backed off. Reeves had won the argument. But he knew he was on
shaky ground. The fact was that Reeves, as the coast guard’s environmental
officer, had the duty to enforce the Clean Water Act on ships, too. It wasn’t
just the EPA’s job. Two different laws said Reeves should crack down on
cargo sweeping. And he felt there was no way he could do it. “That would
have been ridiculous,” says Reeves, now 53 and retired, in an interview
from his home in Montague, Michigan. “I would have lost my job.” Back in Canada, Chris Wiley and his colleagues in Ottawa watched the legal
absurdities south of the border with dismay. They thought it would be nice for
Canada to sign Marpol V too, but they wanted no part of the fiasco it had caused
the Americans. “Every time five years come up, the US Coast Guard just
cringes,” says Wiley. “We were certainly aware that we didn’t want to get ourselves in
the same situation as the US Coast Guard,” says Tom Morris, Transport
Canada’s manager of environmental protection in the marine-safety branch.
The Canadians had a better idea: Why not do a study? The Canadian Coast Guard is responsible for ship-borne pollution, so Morris
rustled up some funds for them to hire Melville Shipping to investigate—a
now-defunct Ottawa company that designed icebreakers and often worked for Canadian
shipping companies as a consultant on ship operations. The 1993 Melville report,
the first study of the phenomenon by either country, estimated that 1,000 tons
of cargo were being dumped into the lakes each year by Canadian vessels alone.
A staggering 93 percent qualified as harmful to fish under the pollution guidelines
of the Ontario Ministry of the Environment. And the discharges seemed to conflict
with the Fisheries Act, which prohibits dumping of coal ash, stones and other
“deleterious substances” in waters where fish live. (Violators of
the act can be fined up to $1 million, while repeat offenders can be jailed
up to three years.) Little information existed on how the discharges affected the lakes and marine
life, but the report listed numerous reasons for worry. It stated that the ore
cargos contained metals like nickel, copper, zinc and lead, which can be “very
toxic” to aquatic life, even in small amounts. It also stated that coal
dumped from ships can release cancer-causing polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
into the water; that floating slicks of ore dust can flow long distances on
currents, with potentially “serious effects” on wetlands and marshes;
and that grain cargo can hurt fish by depleting oxygen in the lakes. According
to the Melville report, grain cargo can also turn into a toxic sludge that activates
dormant contaminants on lake bottoms. The highest priority, according to the study, was to reduce spillage of ore
into Lake Erie, where a combination of shallow depths and extreme existing pollution
had created water conditions that would cause metals to quickly leach out of
the discharged cargos and become especially poisonous. The study also said spillage
in the other lakes “should be minimized” in order to comply with
the Fisheries Act and recommended against discharges in other fragile spots
like spawning grounds and harbours. Finally, the study called for guidelines
on cargo dumping and research into the content and impact of the discharges
and ways to reduce their volume. But after listing all these seemingly serious concerns, the report came to
a bizarre non sequitur: There was actually nothing to worry about. “The
damage done is minimal,” the report concluded. “The effects are
probably very small.” The kicker was that Ottawa needn’t take any
major action at all. “Self-regulation and voluntary reductions of spillage
may obviate the necessity of government-imposed regulations.” That seems to have been just fine with the feds. Self-regulation it would be.
In 1994, the members of the Canadian Shipowners Association voluntarily agreed
to adopt the rules of the US Coast Guard. In accordance with the US rules, sweepings
stopped in sensitive zones and close to shore. But otherwise, it was life as
usual. Canada never adopted the recommended guidelines on cargo sweeping, nor
did it do any of the called-for studies. Ore sweepings kept splashing into Lake
Erie. And even though 124 countries have signed Marpol V—even flag-of-convenience
nations like Liberia, Vanuatu and the Bahamas, which are notorious for their
lenient shipping regulations—Canada still refused. But the saga, like some monster from the deep, wasn’t quite finished.
With the Melville report officially saying that cargo was being chucked into
the Great Lakes, Canada was obligated under an old treaty with the US to report
the dumping to the International Joint Commission, an independent agency that
safeguards water quality in the lakes. The commission wasn’t pleased.
“That in turn caused the US great problems,” says Wiley. “They
said, ‘You’re polluting the Great Lakes.’” The renewed attention had one positive effect. The US Coast Guard finally coughed
up some funds for Reeves to do a study. He got $5,000. It was a laughable amount,
and it took years to get even that, but Reeves put it to surprisingly good use
by gathering 40 scientists, US and Canadian officials and shipping-industry
reps for the first-ever cargo-sweeping summit. It was held in 1999 under the
auspices of the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, at its high-tech
Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory in Ann Arbor, Michigan. The meeting was somewhat of a letdown. Attendees went off into working groups
to hash out the impacts of the dumping on fish, lake sediment and water quality.
One of the groups determined that nine of the 15 types of cargo dumped into
the lakes were potentially toxic. “Of particular concern,” said
the final NOAA report, was taconite—the rust-coloured ore that Reeves
had dug up as a kid—and the possibility that it could release toxic trace
metals into the lakes. Some cargos—namely iron ore, coal, petroleum coke,
millscale and slag—had “the potential for both acute and chronic
environmental impacts,” the report said. But no one really knew what the
impacts were. “There is a critical lack of knowledge and, therefore, a
strong need for research.” Again, there were urgent recommendations of
studies of the impacts and how to reduce the dumping. And once again, nothing
happened. One of the few hard pieces of data from the NOAA report was a “conservative”
estimate of how much cargo was ditched on an average trip: 225 kilograms. The
problem with the estimate was that a lot of the data came from logbooks and
other records of the shipping companies, rather than independent sources. When
the US Coast Guard finally got around to doing its own study of cargo sweeping
in 2003, it concluded that estimates of the quantities dumped were too low because
they relied on shipping company records that were incomplete and underreported
the practice. Many vessels “obviously had not recorded all events,”
the coast guard said. “There were cases in which similar vessels with
similar cargos and routes gave vastly different estimates of residue, an average
of 25 pounds versus 400 pounds, for example.” In Thorold, a hamlet on the Welland Canal, Macdonald is flabbergasted when
asked about NOAA’s 225-kilogram estimate. “That’s absolute
bullshit,” says the former CSL chief engineer. “It could be 20 tons,
easy.” Independently, two other former chief engineers at CSL give similarly
high figures. Robert Stockman, a retired chief engineer who worked for the firm
from 1989 to 2000 and now lives in Hamilton, says the NOAA estimate “is
not accurate” and that the average amount dumped at a time was an amazing
30 tons. “In later years, it was restricted where we would put it, but
it never stopped,” he says. Raj Ranganathan, another former CSL chief engineer who worked for the company
from 1973 to 1993, also says the NOAA estimate is off. “They must be kidding
me,” he says, putting the actual amounts even higher than Macdonald or
Stockman. All three men say the cargo was usually dumped discreetly, either at night
or, if in daytime, when planes or other ships weren’t nearby, to avoid
attracting attention. At CSL headquarters in Montreal, spokesperson Annie Paré flatly rejects
the figures given by the former officers. “The quantities involved vary
between 300 to 1,000 pounds depending on the product carried on board,”
she says in an email. For the company’s main cargo, ore, an average of
300 pounds is dumped per trip, she says, while for grain it is 20 to 50 pounds.
Paré also denies the claim that the sweeping is done discreetly at night
or when there are no witnesses. “This is definitely not our policy!”
she writes. Cargo sweeping is “a practice that results from the normal operations
of a vessel,” Paré says. The cargos are non-hazardous and, in the
absence of Canadian policy or regulations, CSL voluntarily follows the US Coast
Guard rules in both Canadian and US waters, she says. In Cleveland, Ohio, Glen Nekvasil also casts doubt on the figures given by
the former CSL officers. “The numbers sound very high,” says the
vice-president of corporate communications at the Lake Carriers’ Association,
which represents 12 companies with 55 US-flag lake-going vessels. “That’s
not the case on our vessels…. There is a tiny amount left over when vessels
load and offload cargo,” he says. “These are not hazardous materials.
Where does iron ore come from? From the ground!” But whatever the size of the load being dumped, a deeper question remains:
Is there really no way to avoid tossing cargo into the lakes? The shipowners
are adamant that it can’t be helped. A ban, says Nekvasil, “would
shut us down.” And that, in turn, would shut down North America. Piling
up in port would be 150 million tons of annual shipments of ore for the Steel
Belt, coal for power plants, grain for food producers—the lifeblood of
the economy. This same line is taken up by Canadian officials. “They quite
literally would have shut down shipping on the Great Lakes if they had taken
the law in the US,” says Chris Wiley in Sarnia. But, amazingly, given the questions about potential toxic impacts and legalities,
there has never been an independent look at whether the dire predictions are
true. The government studies all seem to start from the premise that cargo sweeping
is as immutable as the lakes themselves. When asked if alternatives have been
studied, Transport Canada’s Morris says, “Not by us.” The
Ottawa-based Canadian Shipowners Association echoes the response. “We’ve
never really looked at options,” says Réjean Lanteigne, the association’s
vice-president and former director-general of the Transport Canada marine-safety
branch. The only cursory look at the matter seems to have happened when the US Coast
Guard did its 2003 study. For the report, the Lake Carriers Association in Cleveland
was sent a letter asking if sweepings could be disposed in a dumpster on shore
while ships are still in port. The association said no. Doing so would delay
ships half an hour and require eight man-hours of work, costing $15,000 per
trip. It was “not feasible.” But was it really so impractical? Was
there a cheaper alternative? How did the cost stack up against what was being
done to the lakes? Given the stakes, one might expect the authorities to explore
these questions independently, rather than relying only on the response from
the shipowners. They never did. In fact, Macdonald says offloading at shore is quite feasible. He says he suggested
it himself at an annual meeting of the company’s ship captains and chief
engineers in the mid-1990s. His proposal was that CSL and other companies could
split the cost of barges in the ports, onto which they could offload sweepings.
“That went nowhere,” he says. “It was a lead balloon. I was
just laughed off the face of the earth because it was going to cost money.” Another alternative is already in place in a new generation of ships that have
special holds to store spillage until they can be discharged at the next port
of call, says Robert Stockman. He says most of today’s lakers were first
built decades ago and discharge a lot more cargo residue than modern vessels.
“They need to design safer ships,” he says. Eric Reeves calls on the shipping community to explore alternatives and likes
the idea of offloading in port. “It might be feasible for some vessels,
for some cargos. It would be nice if they could do that,” he says. It is reprehensible, he says, that cargo sweeping hasn’t been studied
more, especially its impacts and alternatives. “C’mon guys, it’s
worth $100,000 to take a good round turn on the thing. Let’s not just
hobble along with reauthorizations of the [coast guard] enforcement policy,”
he says. “We need to know more about the biological availability of some
of these things. We don’t know [the impacts]. We should spend some money
tracking down these lingering issues.” Some of those lingering questions may finally get answered. The US Coast Guard
renewed its “interim” enforcement policy once again in 2004, but
it has also started a policy review that includes, at long last, an in-depth
environmental-impact study. If the impacts are bad enough, says the coast guard’s
Lieutenant-Commander Mary Sohlberg, it’s even possible—though extremely
unlikely—that cargo sweeping could be banned when the policy expires in
2008. “Cargo sweeping in the Great Lakes is a complicated issue. Our policy
options will emerge as we go through the research gathered in the environmental
assessment, the regulatory process, public meetings and meetings with industry,”
she says. Back in Canada, no studies or policy reviews are planned. In fact, government
officials seem more eager to pass the buck than to take action. At the Ontario
Ministry of Natural Resources, spokesman Steve Payne says the Great Lakes are
provincial Crown land, where written permission for releasing any material is
required under the Ontario Public Lands Act, with fines of up to $5,000 for
violators. “It’s just simply not allowed without permission, which
is hardly likely to be given,” he says. “Why would we give anyone
permission to dump anything in the lakes?” A ship has never gotten a permit
for dumping cargo, Payne says, but the bottom line is the ministry doesn’t
monitor vessels for discharges, so it isn’t likely to do anything about
them. Over at the Ontario Ministry of the Environment, spokesperson John Steele says
cargo vessels that dump anything in the Great Lakes are also subject to the
Ontario Water Resources Act and Environmental Protection Act, which both regulate
discharges of waste. “Could it be a violation of the Ontario Water Resources
Act? I suspect yes,” he says. “If a company generated waste, [the
company] would have to test the waste to see if it is hazardous.” Violators
of either law can be fined up to $6 million per day per charge, and individuals
can be sentenced to jail. So is his department taking action? Steele says his
department could, in theory, but it doesn’t have the authority to pull
over vessels because they are regulated by Transport Canada. There, too, interest in clamping down is nowhere to be found. Spokesperson
Marie-Josée Dubois says her department intends to sign Marpol V in the
next few months, but with the proviso that cargo sweeping will be allowed in
the lakes. “Transport Canada is developing new regulations that will incorporate
the Marpol V requirements,” she says. “The regulations will restrict
the discharge of cargo residue into waters across Canada, with special provisions
for the Great Lakes where discharges will be allowed in very specific areas
to be consistent with U.S. requirements.” In Sarnia, federal Great Lakes guru Chris Wiley says “nothing is going
to change” when Canada finally signs the maritime accord. And he has a
message for Ontario if it should ever try to investigate ships: “Shipping
is a federal responsibility. Ontario has tried to introduce things on shipping
[in the past], but they have been told very politely, ‘Bugger off.’ “The reality is this stuff is not politically saleable,” he says
of efforts to regulate ship discharges. “Shipping in Canada is below the
radar.” It also seems to be below the radar at Environment Canada, the department that
enforces the Fisheries Act. Twelve years after the Melville study, a senior
official there says she has never even heard of cargo sweeping and that she
knows of no investigations of it under the Fisheries Act. “We would have
to look at what they’re doing and see if it’s a problem,”
says Nadine Levin, the department’s senior policy specialist for legislation,
regulations and enforcement. “It’s never been brought to my attention
as an issue.” Over at Lake Ontario Waterkeeper, Mark Mattson is so outraged he has hired
a researcher to look into whether there are grounds for the filing of a legal
complaint with the province and Ottawa to oblige them to investigate. “If
they don’t take action, we can complain to the NAFTA environmental commission
to seek a review of whether the governments are not enforcing their own law,”
he says. On the other hand, Mattson says the inaction isn’t surprising. “When
it comes to income tax or drugs, they have huge armies of people out there enforcing
the law,” he says. “[But] they have next to no investigators on
these environmental issues. The consequences are disastrous. That is the bigger
issue.” Alex Roslin last wrote in This Magazine about an RCMP
officer who stalked and eventually murdered his ex-girlfriend. The piece, Killer
Cop, was nominated for a National Magazine Award. |