Dredging of Vancouver’s Burrard approved to make room for big oil tankers
VICTORIA — The Vancouver Fraser Port Authority says it has received all federal permits to allow for the dredging of Vancouver’s Burrard Inlet, making room for larger oil tankers loading up from the Trans Mountain pipeline.
The agency says the dredging along northern and southern edges of the navigation channel underneath Vancouver’s Second Narrows bridge will start in September, but it could not say how long the work will take.
The authority responsible for Canada’s largest port says the work is being done, so the ships — including Aframax-class tankers — filling up at the Westridge Marine Terminal can “load more fully.”
The Aframax ships measure up to 250 metres long and have a draft of up to 16 metres, but Trans Mountain says on its website that such tankers generally load to about 80 per cent of capacity in order to clear the inlet.


