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British Columbia

Ottawa tables bill banning oil tankers from B.C.'s North Coast

The legislation will prohibit oil tankers carrying crude and persistent oils as cargo from stopping, loading or unloading at ports or marine installations in northern B.C.

Oil tankers carrying crude and persistent oils will not be allowed in the moratorium area

An oil tanker anchors at the terminus to the Kinder Morgan Trans Mountain pipeline in Burnaby, B.C. Under the proposed legislation, such traffic would still be allowed on the South Coast of B.C. (Chris Corday/CBC)

The federal Liberal government has introduced legislation that will turn into law the informal ban on crude oil tanker traffic off B.C.'s North Coast.

Transportation Minister Marc Garneau tabled the legislation in Parliament on Friday, delivering on apromise made byPrime Minister Justin Trudeau in November.

Theact introducedin parliament would prohibit oil tankers from carrying crude and persistent oils as cargo from stopping, loading or unloading at ports or marine installations in northern B.C.

The moratorium area would extend from B.C.'s northern border with the U.S down to the mainland adjacent to the northern tip of Vancouver Island, including Haida Gwaii.

Vessels carrying less than 12,500 metric tonnes of crude or persistent oil will be permitted in the moratorium area to deliver shipmentsto northern communities.

The legislation proposes that penalties fordefying the moratorium reach up to$5 million.

"The Government of Canada is committed to demonstrating a clean environment and a strong economy can go hand-in-hand," Garneau wrote in a release.

"Tabling this legislation is another step towards fulfilling our promise to formalize the tanker moratorium on British Columbia's North Coast."

The proposed act is part of the Liberal government's$1.5 billion Oceans Protection Plan announced in November.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau promised a moratorium on crude oil tanker traffic for B.C.'s North Coast, in November. (Jonathan Hayward/Canadian Press)