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Diesel spill 'makes me really sad' — ʔiiḥatis/ č iinaxịnt Chief Simon John

Just over 36 hours after 8,000 litres of Diesel spilled into Ehattesaht waters, Chief Simon John made a statement on the incident.
zeballos-spill
Approximately 8,000 litres of diesel were spilled near Zeballos on Vancouver Island Dec. 14.

Just over 36 hours after 8,000 litres of Diesel spilled into Ehattesaht waters, Chief Simon John made a statement on the incident.

Chief John said that the incident saddened him, and that “I am sure I will get angry next but for right now I am sad that all of this fuel is out there sloshing around our territory, washing up on our beaches. It is clam season and our people should be out there digging on these low winter tides. We have done this forever and this year we have to close some beaches."

On Dec. 14, an error during a refuelling operation at a Grieg Seafood fish farm near the community caused the deluge of fuel into the ocean. John's statement says that 40 people are working in the community and on the water to clean up the spill.

"Resources from Grieg, B.C.’s Ministry of Environment, the Coast Guard and DFO are here with specialized crews from Strategic Natural Resource Consultants and our Nation," his statement says. "As the title holders to these waters we are taking responsibility for these efforts and are setting up a coordination centre in the Nations office for the operational and environmental teams to meet and plan the day to day activities and build the long term recovery plan."

Due to higher tides in December, as well as cooler water temperatures, John said that the diesel can stay in the environment for longer and travel further. That, coupled with windstorms and complex tides means that it "can get mixed in ways that are difficult to deal with. While there is no time to have incidents like this, winter in Zeballos is even harder."

“We had a really high tide on Friday night with the full moon and it was pushed further up the beaches than normal with the storm surge that occurred,” added Chief John. “I think dealing with this will take a lot of creativity, hard work and some real resources.”

Ehattesaht will be seeking more monitoring support, and will set up a rigorous testing protocol to help identify where the fuel is, and how it can be cleaned up. Spills and industrial accidents like this are not new to ̨MM Nations. Earlier this month a loading dock collapsed at a fish farm in Port Hardy. Another clean up in the Zeballos Inlet was necessary in 2015 after a logging camp sunk in the area. The inlet also got international attention after a young whale calf was stranded in the inlet after its mother died.

"There is along legacy of abandoned cannery and forestry operations where spills or slow leaks have left lasting pollution in important ecosystems," John's statement says. "Today there continue to be many risks as people move fuel on and around the water and more often than not human error leads to incidents like what we are seeing in Zeballos Inlet."

“Our people use these beaches continually and we have for thousands of years. It is where we get our food. It is where we generate our lifestyle” he added. “We always know there are risks when there are activities but we must do better to prevent this type of accident.”

"Ehattesaht will be sending out reminders to all operators in its territory who are handling fuel to ensure they are extra vigilant now," the statement ends. "Over the next while we will be asking for additional fail-safe measures to be put in place. This includes our own operations."



Marc Kitteringham

About the Author: Marc Kitteringham

I joined Black press in early 2020, writing about the environment, housing, local government and more.
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