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May 10, 2002
Grim-faced Nunavut ministers
admit the obvious
Okalik and Kattuk confirm
what everyone already knows: Nunavuts gasoline sucks
JANE
GEORGE
A grim-faced Paul Okalik
and an equally grim-faced Peter Kattuk confirmed last week what many in Nunavut
already suspect: "the gasoline is causing engine damage."
For the first time, Premier
Okalik and Kattuk, minister of public works, admitted Nunavut has "bad
gas."
A report from the Alberta
Research Council concludes gasoline from the Baffin and Kivalliq regions produces
potentially harmful engine deposits. Even treatment with a deposit-control agent
didnt appear to have much impact on reducing the gummy deposits.
The research council, Kattuk
said, was working on finding a way to purify the remaining gasoline supplies
an estimated 10 million litres of gas outside of Iqaluit.
"Arriving at these
answers has been a frustrating experience for everyone involved. Although we
now have some answers, we realize that this will be a detailed process with
no quick solutions," Kattuk said.
At the beginning of this
week, the Northern Transportation Company Limited (NTCL), which holds the contract
for the purchase and delivery of the gas, still hadnt seen the Alberta
Research Council report.
"Im at a bit
of a disadvantage," said NTCL marketing manager Kirk Vander Ploeg.
Vander Ploeg said he was
"very concerned" about the situation.
However, he said the gas
was tested when it was loaded and discharged to see if it met specifications.
He said it met the specifications. A deposit-causing contaminant wasnt
on the list of things that were to be looked for.
NTCL has held the lucrative
eastern Arctic fuel resupply contract since 1996. When it was first awarded,
it was estimated to be worth about $30 million a year in cash-flow to the company.
Kattuk and Okalik said
the GN never suspected there could be anything wrong with the gasoline that
NTCL purchased and shipped to the Baffin and Kivalliq regions.
But a deposit-control additive
thats required in all Canada-refined gas was apparently lacking this years
gas supply. This additive helps keep engines running free of deposits.
NTCLs current contract
expires this fall. The government of Nunavut has issued a request for proposals
seeking a shipper and a supplier for fuel in the Baffin and Kivalliq regions.
This time around, transportation
and purchase components of the contracts will be awarded separately.
The new contract will require
certification that the gasoline meets Canadian- and Nunavut-specific standards.
The contractor will have to list the names and amounts of all additives.
The government is now specifying
that the new gasoline must be purchased in Canada. The sub-standard batch shipped
to the Baffin and Kivalliq regions last year is believed to have been purchased
from New York City.
"We will be doing
something to make sure that the gas delivered to the communities will be adequate
and do some testing to make sure that the communities are not getting bad gas
before it is put into the tank farms," Kattuk said.
"We do not want to
experience it again in the future. We dont want to experience having bad
gas again for the communities."
In 1999, when Gjoa Haven
experienced similar problems with its gas, the municipality picked up the tab
to fly in $37,000 worth of gas at the beginning of the boating season
but this scenario never came up as a possible solution to the present bad gas
problem.
Kattuk cautioned that anyone
going out on the land should watch out.
"Nunavummiut should
exercise particular caution and keep safety in mind when travelling on the land
and ice. Spring weather is warmer, boats are being put in the water and people
are travelling further to hunt. I urge everyone to contact local wildlife officers
for more information on safety," Kattuk said.
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