Showing posts with label tanker exclusion zone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tanker exclusion zone. Show all posts

Thursday, November 27, 2025

Why Oil Tankers Still Don’t Belong on BC’s North Coast

ðŸšŦ⛽ Why Oil Tankers Still Don’t Belong on BC’s North Coast — And Why the Industry Already Knows It 🌊⚠️

Every few years, the same debate pops up again:
“Why can’t we just expand the pipelines and ship crude from northern BC? Aren’t modern tankers super safe now? Can’t we just dredge, add tugs, or build offshore terminals?” ðŸĪ”ðŸšĒ🛠️

Honestly?
This whole conversation misses the one question that actually matters:

💰📉 Can the voyage be insured?

Because if a route cannot be insured, it doesn’t matter what politicians claim, what oil executives promise, or what engineers sketch on paper.
No insurance = no tankers.
Period. ðŸšŦðŸšĒ

And for over 50+ years, the insurance industry has been crystal clear:

❌🌊 Hecate Strait, Dixon Entrance & the Davis Shelf are NOT survivable for crude tankers in a full-failure scenario.

Not “risky.”
Not “challenging.”
Unsurvivable. 💀⚓


🌊️🌊 The Harsh Marine Reality People Don’t See

There’s a reason the tanker exclusion zone existed long before today’s political fights.
It wasn’t environmental ideology — it was industry self-preservation. ðŸ›Ą️

A fully loaded crude tanker entering or leaving the North Coast must cross a violent, unstable marine zone where:

  • 🌊 Deep Pacific swells rise suddenly into short, breaking seas
  • 🌊️ Winter storms hammer the coast with brutal force
  • ⚓ No deep-water safe refuge exists
  • ⏳ Minutes — not hours — before drifting into shoals if propulsion fails
  • ðŸšŦ No weather escape options
  • 🛟 Tug response times can’t beat the geography

This is what insurers look at.
This is what ship operators base decisions on.
This is what governments pretend not to hear. 🙉


💞⚠️ Insurance Doesn’t Ask “What Happens on a Good Day?”

Underwriters ask the only question that matters:

“What happens on the worst day in 20 years?” ðŸŒĐ️ðŸ’Ĩ

And the answer is brutally simple:

If everything goes wrong at once, a crude tanker in that region cannot be guaranteed a survivable window. ❌ðŸšĒ

No fleet of tugs, no GPS magic, no fancy dynamic positioning, and no offshore terminal can overcome the physics of the coastline.
So insurers refuse.
And without insurance, tankers don’t sail. 🛑

Everyone in the industry knows this:

  • ⚓ Marine pilots
  • 🌊 Operators
  • 💞 Insurers
  • ðŸ›Ē️ Oil shippers
  • ðŸŠķ Coastal First Nations

It’s the public that keeps being distracted by fantasy scenarios.


🗚️❌ This Isn’t “Politics” — It’s Geography + Physics

Calling the ban “ideological” totally ignores why the shipping industry itself avoids the region.

A catastrophic spill here would be:

  • ðŸ”Ĩ Uncontainable
  • 🌊 Unrecoverable
  • 🐚 Ecologically permanent
  • ðŸ’ļ Financially catastrophic
  • ðŸšŦ Way beyond any cleanup capacity

That’s why the industry stays away.

Not because of “activists.”
Not because of “red tape.”
But because one spill would destroy everything — including them. ⚠️ðŸ’Ĩ


🔔⏰ Time for People to Wake Up

Politicians talk.
Companies dream.
But the insurance industry — the final decision-maker — already closed this door decades ago. 🚊❌

Northern BC crude tanker traffic isn’t happening:

  • Not now
  • Not in ten years
  • Not in twenty
  • Not ever — unless the laws of physics change 🌍⚓

If we want serious conversations about energy, jobs, climate, and coastal protection, we need to stop pretending this is an engineering puzzle and start accepting what the marine world has known for generations:

ðŸšĒ⚠️ Some routes are simply too dangerous.

No amount of wishful thinking will change that.