Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Higher Fuel Costs Prompt BC Ferries To Remove Fuel Rebate And Increase Fares

The Canadian Press, 13 Jun, 2018 11:19 AM
    VICTORIA — The cost of taking a ferry in B.C. is going up as the price of fuel increases on the world market.
     
     
    BC Ferries announced Tuesday that it will remove fuel rebates starting June 27.
     
     
    Rebates and surcharges are used to manage the volatility of fuel prices, and BC Ferries said it doesn't benefit financially from the mechanisms.
     
     
    Ferries president and CEO Mark Collins said in an interview that over the last 14 years the company has had surcharges, rebates, and periods with neither as the market price of diesel fuel fluctuated.  
     
     
    "Ferry users have received rebates as often as they've received surcharges, so there's no net impact on the ferry user over time," he said.
     
     
    The added costs vary depending on ferry trips, but on major routes an extra 50 cents will be charged for passengers and $1.70 more for a vehicle.
     
     
    Transportation Minister Claire Trevena said in May that she was disappointed BC Ferries planned on removing the rebate and the government was willing to work with the company to avoid an increase.
     
     
    Collins said the company discussed the issue with the government for three weeks, but couldn't come to an agreement. 
     
     
    "We just couldn't reach a resolution. We didn't feel they were in the interests of ferry users," he said.
     
     
    Over the last year the price of fuel has gone up sharply and the rebate should have come off some time ago, Collins said.
     
     
    He acknowledged that affordable travel is important for customers and said the company uses fuel deferral accounts and hedging as tools to help reduce the impact of fluctuating fuel prices.
     
     
    The added fuel cost varies with seasons, he said, noting that it could be $750,000 in the slow season and double that during a busy summer.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Two-Thirds Of Current Pot Users Will Switch To Legal Retailers, Survey Suggests

    Two-Thirds Of Current Pot Users Will Switch To Legal Retailers, Survey Suggests
    Canadians who currently use cannabis expect to buy nearly two-thirds of their pot from legal retailers once recreational marijuana becomes legal in Canada, a new survey suggests.

    Two-Thirds Of Current Pot Users Will Switch To Legal Retailers, Survey Suggests

    First Woman To Climb To Summit Of Canada's Highest Mountain Almost Lost Her Life

    First Woman To Climb To Summit Of Canada's Highest Mountain Almost Lost Her Life
    The first woman to climb to the top of Canada's highest mountain in a solo trek says her biggest fear came when she fell into a dangerously deep crevice.

    First Woman To Climb To Summit Of Canada's Highest Mountain Almost Lost Her Life

    Chinese Tourist, 54, Declared Dead After Bus Crash In Eastern Ontario

    Chinese Tourist, 54, Declared Dead After Bus Crash In Eastern Ontario
    A Chinese tourist, who was among 24 people injured when a bus drove off the highway in eastern Ontario on Monday, has died, provincial police said.

    Chinese Tourist, 54, Declared Dead After Bus Crash In Eastern Ontario

    Iceberg With Archway In Centre Draws Onlookers To Eastern Newfoundland Cove

    Iceberg With Archway In Centre Draws Onlookers To Eastern Newfoundland Cove
    The iceberg has a hollow archway carved in the middle and appears to be grounded in the waters just off a Bonavista peninsula community in Upper Amherst Cove.

    Iceberg With Archway In Centre Draws Onlookers To Eastern Newfoundland Cove

    Harjit Sajjan Defends Delay In Completion Of Inquiry Into Military College Suicides

    Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan is speaking up for his department in the face of angry complaints from family members who want to see the results of an internal inquiry into the deaths of three Royal Military College students.

    Harjit Sajjan Defends Delay In Completion Of Inquiry Into Military College Suicides

    Female Pedestrian Struck By Truck In Crosswalk In Surrey

    Female Pedestrian Struck By Truck In Crosswalk In Surrey
    Surrey RCMP is requesting the public’s assistance in a motor vehicle collision that occurred on May 31, 2018 in the Newton area of Surrey.

    Female Pedestrian Struck By Truck In Crosswalk In Surrey