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August 16, 2002
Shimmer of new fuel impresses
customers
New gas supply selling
at a reduced rate until October
DENISE RIDEOUT
Tankers are making their
way through Nunavut's bays and inlets loaded with drums of a silver liquid hunters
and boaters are eager to get in their tanks.
The drums are full of a
fresh supply of gasoline for Nunavut communities. And Nunavummiut are hoping
the new gas is of a higher quality than last year's supply - which gummed up
hunters' snowmobiles and boats.
Tankers have already delivered
fuel to several communities, including Cape Dorset and Iqaluit, and are now
headed to other places in the Baffin and Kivalliq regions.
Susan Makpah, director
of the petroleum products division of the Nunavut government's department of
public works, said when the tankers arrive in the communities they'll unload
the new gas and take away tanks of the remaining, contaminated gas.
"We have isolated
the 2001 gasoline into one tank in all of our tanks in the communities,"
Makpah said.
The 2001 gas supply wreaked
havoc for many hunters, boaters and snowmobilers in the Baffin and Kivalliq
regions. The gas damaged engines, pistons, carburetors, piston rings and crank
shafts, and there was an abnormally high number of snowmobile break-downs.
For months, people complained
that the GN had purchased a bad batch of gas. It wasn't until April that the
GN finally tested the fuel and discovered the gas was missing a key ingredient
that helps keep engines clean.
Gas delivered to communities
Anticipation was in the
air in Cape Dorset early this week when the tanker approached. On Monday, the
local Co-op, which handles the gas contract, was getting ready to unload the
supply and fill the holding tanks.
Art Stewart, Cape Dorset's
senior administrative officer, said residents are curious to see what this year's
supply is like. "I heard people comment 'I hope we get better gas than
we got last year,'" he said.
"It was certainly
a nuisance for many people, especially with snowmobiles, and something happens
on your snowmobile and you're 100 miles from nowhere."
Drums of gas for the capital
city arrived in port late last week. Things run a little differently in Iqaluit
because private gas stations, not the GN, sell the gas to customers.
Two local gas stations,
Baffin Gas Bar and Beach Gas Bar, did some major clean-up work before the new
supply arrived.
"We closed down the
gas bar at 7:30 a.m. and began to pump and clean out our holding tanks. That's
a process that basically vacuums everything out of the tank," said Chris
West of Qikiqtaaluk Corp., owner of the two gas stations.
"We did it to ensure
that if there were contaminants in there that there was nothing left."
At the Baffin Gas Bar,
workers pumped out the remaining 6,000 litres of last year's supply and put
it into drums.
Interestingly, West said,
some Iqaluit residents are jumping at the chance to get their hands on the old
gas.
"I didn't anticipate
this at all, because of the number of complaints about the quality of the gas.
You know, you wouldn't think that someone would want to buy it. But some people
commented that 'Well, I've used it all year and the damage is done.'"
The gas stations are waiting
to hear from the GN whether they can sell the old gas.
Meanwhile, the new gas
is causing excitement of its own. "It is totally different. It's a clear
to silver colour. It's a beautiful colour. And the smell - the smell is much
nicer," West said.
The new supply is also
selling at two thirds the price, a sale the GN instituted when it discovered
the gas was faulty. The price may change when the GN does a review in October.
West said people are taking
advantage of the good- quality gas at a lower price.
"People are certainly
stocking up on it. We've seen quite a few drums coming through and a lot more
jerry cans than we normally would for this time of year."
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