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January 17, 2003
GN seals new Nunavut fuel
deals
Woodward, Shell Canada
return to the eastern Arctic
Mel Woodward
Sr., head of the Woodward Group: "We know the people, we know the environment."
(PHOTO BY JIM BELL)
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JIM
BELL
Like two purring cats who
have swallowed the family goldfish, the heads of two non-Nunavut companies glowed
with contentment this week as they signed the multimillion-dollar fuel contracts
they plucked from the hands of their Inuit-owned competitor last year.
During a 45-minute signing
ceremony in the Nunavut legislature on Jan. 14, Tim Faithfull, president and
CEO of Shell Canada Ltd., and Mel Woodward Sr., head of the Woodward Group of
Companies, made sure reporters heard about their firms longstanding ties
with northern Canada.
Faithfull boasted that
Shell has served the eastern Arctic for more than 50 years. That includes a
long relationship with Iqaluit, which ended in 1996. "Im really pleased
to bring Shell back to Iqaluit," he said.
Shells Canadian boss
also said his companys fuel will come from Canadian refineries. "We
stand behind the quality of our product," Faithfull said.
The Nunavut government
is still cutting compensation checks for hundreds of Baffin and Kivalliq snowmobile
owners whose machines were damaged by a supply of sub-standard gasoline that
the Northern Transportation Company Ltd. bought in 2001 from a refinery in New
Jersey.
The GNs contract
with Shell specifies that the deposit-control additive found to be missing in
the old NTCL-supplied product in 2001 must be included in Shells new gasoline.
Mel Woodward Sr., whose
Labrador-based firm will ship Shells fuel products, said his company has
been serving the Arctic for 36 years. In 1967, Woodward started a fuel distribution
service in Resolute Bay.
"We know the people,
we know the environment," Woodward said.
Woodwards shipping
firm will deliver Shell Canadas fuel to all communities in the Baffin
and Kivalliq regions. Woodwards delivery contract will save the Nunavut
government about $19 million over the next three years.
He said his company wants
to look at making more investments in Nunavut, including a General Motors dealership
here.
"Were going
to take a very close look at the development of Nunavut," Woodward said.
A sign of the Woodward
Groups interest in Nunavut is its recent purchase of the Tuvak, a shiny
new tanker built in Finland. The Tuvak will pick up fuel from Montreal and deliver
it to Baffin communities.
The Mokami, a shallow-draught
tanker that has delivered fuel for the Nunavut Power Corp. for several years,
will pick up Shells products in Churchill and deliver them to Kivalliq
communities along the west coast of Hudson Bay.
As for NTCL, the company
will continue to ship fuel to the Kitikmeot region on barges running up the
Mackenzie River and along the Arctic coast. Imperial Oil Ltd. will supply the
Kitikmeots fuel product. Chris Coté of NTCL signed that deal during
Tuesdays ceremony.
Fifty per cent of NTCLs
parent company, Norterra, is owned by the Inuvialuit of the western Northwest
Territories. The other 50 per cent is owned by Nunavuts Nunasi Corp.
In 1996, NTCL won a $90-million
contract to supply and ship fuel to the Baffin and Kivalliq regions. That contract
was renewed in 1999, just before the creation of Nunavut.
But last year, the government
of Nunavut separated that contract into two parts: one for supplying fuel, and
the other for shipping it.
After being out-bid by
their competition on both contracts, NTCL officials announced they will reassess
their dry cargo service to the Kivalliq region. Thats because the company
shipped dry cargo and bulk fuel from Churchill in the same barges, realizing
cost savings on both services.
Kirk Vander Ploeg, NTCLs
marketing manager, said the companys review of its Kivalliq operations
wont be finished until the end of the month.
Meanwhile, the government
of Nunavut issued a request for proposals late last year seeking a firm to provide
a dry-cargo service in the Baffin and Kivalliq. That contract has yet to be
awarded.
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