Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

TSB report finds ships may be outgrowing ports

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Nov, 2020 08:05 PM
  • TSB report finds ships may be outgrowing ports

The Transportation Safety Board says the Port of Vancouver may be close to exceeding its ability to safely handle large container ships.

The safety board issues the caution in its report into a January 2019 incident where the container vessel Ever Summit hit a crane while being piloted into the Vanterm terminal in the Port of Vancouver.

The crane arm collapsed over the stern of the ship, damaging the vessel and berth.

The report says the pilot sent incorrect orders to two tugs assisting the ship into berth, and a lack of standardized communications between the pilot, ship's crew and tug captains compounded the problem.

The safety board also raises concerns about the increasing size of container ships worldwide, and the need to upgrade port infrastructure to safely handle such large vessels.

The report says there's been an "absence of any oversight" from Transport Canada and the Vancouver Fraser Port Authority, the agency responsible for Vancouver's port, for the suitability of vessel berths in Canada's busiest port.

"The Board is concerned that the size of vessels may exceed the Port of Vancouver’s terminal infrastructure capacity to accommodate them safely," the report says.

The board's report says without upgrades to existing infrastructure, the larger vessels necessitate berthing manoeuvres that have "little tolerance for error."

Since the incident, the board says British Columbia Coast Pilots Ltd., the independent body that oversees ship pilots in the province, has developed standard communication procedures for use between pilots and tugs.

The report also says the Port of Vancouver and Vanterm, one of the 29 terminals operating within the port, have reviewed crane storage practices to ensure arriving and departing ships are less likely to clip the equipment.

MORE National ARTICLES

WATCH: The BC NDP promising voters a $1000 dollar payment as part of its election platform. Canada recording it’s highest COVID19 case count.

WATCH: The BC NDP promising voters a $1000 dollar payment as part of its election platform. Canada recording it’s highest COVID19 case count.
The BC NDP promising voters a $1000 dollar payment as part of its election platform. Canada recording it’s highest COVID19 case count. A classroom at a Surrey elementary school has been exposed to COVID19.

WATCH: The BC NDP promising voters a $1000 dollar payment as part of its election platform. Canada recording it’s highest COVID19 case count.

PBO: Few to use sickness benefit for COVID-19

PBO: Few to use sickness benefit for COVID-19
In a report Wednesday morning, the parliamentary budget officer estimates that only $50 million out of the estimated $655 million of the new sickness benefit will go to workers who have COVID-19.

PBO: Few to use sickness benefit for COVID-19

Minister calls out China for 'hostage diplomacy'

Minister calls out China for 'hostage diplomacy'
Harjit Sajjan made the comments during a wide-ranging panel discussion hosted by Slovakian think tank Globsec, nearly two years after Chinese authorities first detained former diplomat Michael Kovrig and entrepreneur Michael Spavor.

Minister calls out China for 'hostage diplomacy'

Guy Lafleur facing recurrence of lung cancer

Guy Lafleur facing recurrence of lung cancer
Lafleur was informed of the diagnosis during an appointment with his medical team earlier this week at the Centre hospitalier de l'Universite de Montreal, also known as CHUM.

Guy Lafleur facing recurrence of lung cancer

One hurt in shooting on Vancouver's west side

One hurt in shooting on Vancouver's west side
A statement from police says a family of three was leaving a restaurant when the shots were fired.

One hurt in shooting on Vancouver's west side

New Storyboard Honours Victims of Komagata Maru

New Storyboard Honours Victims of Komagata Maru
In 2019, Council supported recommendations from the Surrey Heritage Advisory Commission to conduct research into the earliest South Asians in Surrey, deliver programming relevant to Surrey’s diverse communities, and to create a heritage storyboard reflecting on the Komagata Maru incident and systemic racism.

New Storyboard Honours Victims of Komagata Maru