From Reuters:
“Flood-hit Canadian province
limits fuel, non-essential travel”
(A broken dike is seen after
rainstorms lashed the western Canadian province of British Columbia, triggering
landslides and floods, shutting highways, in Abbottsford, British Columbia,
Canada November 19, 2021.)
British Columbia imposed
temporary restrictions on fuel and non-essential travel on Friday to ease
supply chain disruptions and support recovery work after floods and mudslides
destroyed roads, houses and left thousands stranded in the western Canadian
province. The orders, announced by Deputy Premier Mike Farnworth in a briefing,
limits people in some areas, including the Vancouver Island, to 30 liters (7.9
gallons) of fuel per visit to a gas station until Dec. 1. Non-essential travel
along severely affected highways will also be prohibited. "These orders
will help keep commercial traffic moving, stabilize our supply chains and make
sure everyone gets home safely," Farnworth said.
The storms, which started on
Sunday, forced the closure of the Trans Mountain pipeline and cut two critical
east-west rail lines owned by Canadian Pacific Railway (CP.TO) and Canadian
National Railway Co (CNR.TO) that lead to Canada's busiest port of Vancouver,
impeding the supply of fuel and goods. read more Farnworth said the province
was also working with the federal government to import fuel via alternate ways
including by truck and barge from the United States or neighboring Alberta. Hours
before the restrictions were announced, the flood-battered province received
some good news when CP said work to repair damaged infrastructure would
continue non-stop and service should be restored in the middle of next week. "Barring
any unforeseen issues, we currently estimate service will be restored
mid-week," spokesperson Salem Woodrow said in an email.
The Trans Mountain pipeline,
which carries up to 300,000 barrels per day of crude oil from Alberta province
to the Pacific coast, also said it was "optimistic" that it can
restart the pipeline in some capacity by the end of next week. CN said it was
making progress in repairing its impacted rail network in British Columbia, but
it expects the repair work to continue at least into next week. The disaster
looks set to be the costliest natural disaster to ever hit Canada. The railway
shutdowns have left exporters of commodities scrambling to divert shipments
away from Vancouver and underscored the vulnerability of Canada's supply chains
to climate change. read more Water pumps are still working flat out in the city
of Abbotsford to the east of Vancouver. If they fail, officials said all
160,000 residents may have to leave. Bruce Banman, a provincial lawmaker who
represents the area, surveyed the damage from a helicopter on Friday and said
about 50% of agriculture-rich Sumas prairie remains underwater. "The damage
is significant, it's catastrophic," he said. "It's heartbreaking to
see. There are farmers still trying to save livestock." He said
infrastructure repairs alone would cost more than C$1 billion ($790 million)
and that did not cover the loss of crops.
^ Hopefully these restrictions
will end soon and the Canadian Government, other Canadian Provinces and
Territories and the United States will step-up to help BC. ^
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