Close X
Thursday, January 9, 2025
ADVT 
National

BC Ferries Reports $77.4m In Earnings, Increased Passenger Traffic Last Year

The Canadian Press, 30 Jun, 2017 01:29 PM
    VICTORIA — Coastal travellers can expect fares with BC Ferries to remain steady as the company reports it has experienced a surplus for the second year in a row.
     
     
    BC Ferries says in a release issued Friday that consolidated net earnings for 2017 is $77.4 million, up from $69.5 million the year prior.
     
    The company is attributing the earnings to a 2.9 per cent increase in vehicle traffic and 1.7 per cent increase in passenger traffic compared with 2016.
     
     
    CEO Mark Collins says the strong financial performance will help renew the ferry fleet, pay down debt and reduce the need for future loans.
     
     
    He says the ferry network will need a new ship about every year for the next 12 years, at an average cost of $70 million.
     
     
    Although more traffic meant higher operating costs, Collins says the newly introduced Salish Class natural gas-fuelled vessels are less costly to run and two more vessels will be converted later this year.
     
     
    "We are well on our way to building a standardized, interoperable fleet which will reduce costs, improve our environmental footprint and further increase safety," Collins said in a news release.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Highlights Of The NDP-Green Deal In British Columbia

    Highlights Of The NDP-Green Deal In British Columbia
    Some of the key elements of a deal between the NDP and Green party on a minority government in British Columbia:

    Highlights Of The NDP-Green Deal In British Columbia

    Forecast Thunderstorms Add To Flooding Concerns Across Southern B.C.

    Forecast Thunderstorms Add To Flooding Concerns Across Southern B.C.
    VANCOUVER — Residents in several areas of British Columbia are bracing for severe thunderstorms as another round of wicked weather bears down on flood-weary regions.

    Forecast Thunderstorms Add To Flooding Concerns Across Southern B.C.

    Dispute Over Grabher Licence Plate Heats Up As N.S. Man Told To Remove Plate

    Dispute Over Grabher Licence Plate Heats Up As N.S. Man Told To Remove Plate
    HALIFAX — A Nova Scotia man fighting to have his last name — Grabher — reinstated on a licence plate says police have now forced him to remove an inactive Alberta plate from the front of his car.

    Dispute Over Grabher Licence Plate Heats Up As N.S. Man Told To Remove Plate

    Robert De Niro Lends Celebrity To Nobu Launch As Worries Persist About Toronto's Housing Market

    Robert De Niro Lends Celebrity To Nobu Launch As Worries Persist About Toronto's Housing Market
    Actor Robert De Niro, celebrity chef Nobu Matsuhisa and a cavalcade of development executives are betting huge on Toronto despite outside concerns about a real estate bubble in the city.

    Robert De Niro Lends Celebrity To Nobu Launch As Worries Persist About Toronto's Housing Market

    N.B. Drivers Will Have To Keep Distance From Cyclists Under 'Ellen's Law'

    N.B. Drivers Will Have To Keep Distance From Cyclists Under 'Ellen's Law'
    The amendment to the Motor Vehicle Act known as "Ellen's Law" means drivers must leave at least one metre of open space between their vehicle and a bicycle when passing a bike travelling in the same direction.

    N.B. Drivers Will Have To Keep Distance From Cyclists Under 'Ellen's Law'

    Police In Ontario Turning To Facebook In An Effort To Get Leads In Cold Cases

    Police are turning to social media in an effort to generate leads in unsolved homicides and missing person's cases in central Ontario.

    Police In Ontario Turning To Facebook In An Effort To Get Leads In Cold Cases