Photo: Green Marine / Port Metro Vancouver |
Although it wasn't exactly an easy sell, the crowd was more
receptive than you might think. I was presenting at the annual conference of
Green Marine, an industry-led program under which ports, terminals and
shipowners attempt to measure and reduce the environmental impact of their
operations in areas such as greenhouse gas emissions, waste management and oil
spill prevention.
In media debates about increasing tanker traffic off BC’s
coast, the shipping industry often takes the position that they are unfairly
targeted. The sentiment is: ‘we don’t extract the oil or make the laws that
govern it – we just carry it’. In my presentation, I suggested that this
position wasn't going to fly anymore in BC – not when what the ships are
carrying is oil, which is culturally and politically, and not just
environmentally, toxic. The shipping industry is now under the microscope every
day, not just when there is an incident or a spill. At least at the moment in
BC, the shipping industry’s reputation is bound up with the reputation of the
oil industry’s; and that reputation is not being helped by failing to
acknowledge that ship owners and ports are more than innocent bystanders in the
life cycle of oil.
So while we need to acknowledge that tanker safety and oil
spill prevention have come a long way since the days of the Exxon Valdez, and
that many members of Green Marine are working hard to reduce the direct impacts
of their operations, true environmental leadership means taking into account
the impacts of the products you carry. There
is no doubt that the task of measuring and assessing these impacts is
technically complex, and that mitigating them raises big questions about the
future of the shipping industry in a carbon constrained world. They are
certainly questions that are beyond the scope of a program like Green Marine in
its current format – but the climate challenge demands that they be asked.
It also demands that we work together across traditional
divides, which is why Georgia Strait Alliance has decided to become a supporter
of Green Marine. Although we will encourage the program to raise the bar in how
it defines sustainability and environmental leadership, we also need to
acknowledge that many of its members are making genuine efforts to reduce their
environmental footprint, and working with them to push the envelope is more effective
than washing our hands of an initiative just because it doesn't yet go far enough.
There are always tensions when strange bedfellows come together – but these can
be productive, and building unusual alliances to find solutions is what Georgia
Strait Alliance is all about.
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