Coast guard, First Nations work to contain oil leak from decades-old shipwreck in B.C.'s Nootka Sound - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 06:09 PM | Calgary | -11.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

Coast guard, First Nations work to contain oil leak from decades-old shipwreck in B.C.'s Nootka Sound

The Canadian Coast Guard is still dealing with oil that is leaking from a shipwreck that sank in Nootka Sound in 1968.

Sheen was spotted at the surface near the shipwreck of the MV Schiedyk earlier this month

An oily sheen from the MV Schiedyk is pictured off the coast of B.C.'s Bligh Island in late 2020. (Spill Response B.C.)

The Canadian Coast Guard says they are looking at "all avenues right now" to stem leaking oil from a decades-old shipwreck off the coast of B.C.'s Bligh Island.

"We will be working around the clock on this, there's no doubt about it," saidTyler Yager,an incident commander with the Canadian Coast Guard.

Leaking oil was spotted from the shipwreck,theMV Schiedyk,earlier this month. The ship sank in1968, when ithit an underwater ledge and sank on the south side of Bligh Island. All 34 crew members survived,but the ship sank with oil on board.

Officials have hired a marine consultant to determine the next steps to stem theleak, or possibly remove the oil from the wreck.

Yager says it's been difficult to quantify how much oil remains on board and how much has leaked.

"We don't have firm numbers yet regarding how much fuel or heavy fuel oil might have been aboard the ship at the time of the grounding," he said. "What we can confirm is that there's about 30 to 50 litres [of oil] on the water at any given time."

Authorities have put down a 16,000-footboom to protectcultural and environmentally sensitive areas, he said.

Coast guard officials are working with theMowachaht/Muchalaht First Nation, as well as with representativesfrom the Hesquiaht First Nation and Nuu-chah-nulth Tribal Council.

"We have a good idea of where the environmental sensitivities are, but the local knowledge [on where] the cultural sensitivities are for instance, clam beds, historical sites, and just general information of the area [is important]," said Yager.

Yager says it would be rare for something like this to happen in modern times, noting that the ship sank before the MarineLiability Act came into force, which holds polluters responsible for clean-up.

"There are firm laws now put in place in Canada that hold the polluter responsible," he said.

Listen to the interview with Tyler Yageron CBC's All Points West:

With files from All Points West