British Columbia

Canadian Coast Guard upgrades radar monitoring of marine traffic off B.C. coast

The federal government is adding to marine traffic monitoring with more radar coverage along the British Columbia coast in order to improve safety for ships travelling through narrow and challenging waterways.

New radar slated for Seaforth Channel where a grounded tug leaked more than 100,000 litres of diesel in 2016

The Nathan E. Stewart spilled an estimated 110,000 litres of diesel and another 2,000 litres of lubricants after it ran aground in the Seaforth Channel on Oct. 13, 2016. (Heiltsuk Nation)

The federal government is adding to marine traffic monitoring with more radar coverage along the British Columbia coast in order to improve safety for ships travelling through narrow and challenging waterways. 

Fisheries and Oceans Canada says six new radar installations will fill in existing gaps in coverage for busy and risky stretches of water from the northern end of Georgia Strait to Queen Charlotte Strait and in the waters off Prince Rupert.  

Fisheries Minister Jonathan Wilkinson announced the new installations Thursday at the Canadian Coast Guard station in Richmond.

A government statement says the expanded radar coverage is part of the $1.5-billion Oceans Protection Plan  designed to improve marine safety and safeguard Canada's marine environment and coastal communities.

One of the new radars is slated for Seaforth Channel on the Central Coast where a grounded tug leaked more than 110,000 litres of diesel and other lubricants in October 2016, fouling shellfish beds near the community of Bella Bella.

Wilkinson says the six new stations will add to the reliable and accurate information about vessel movement along the B.C. coast.

"This information will increase marine safety and reduce the risk of marine emergencies. This is another example of how we are partnering with Indigenous and coastal communities in B.C. to make our waters and coasts safer, cleaner and healthier," Wilkinson says in the statement.

The new radar stations will be located within the traditional territories of a number of First Nations and the federal government says it has their support for the upgrades.