A columnist and transportation researcher based in Ontario thinks the country is missing out on considerable shipping potential in the Mackenzie River and Beaufort Sea.
Writing for the Maritime Executive, Harry Valentine has looked into several aspects of Northern shipping potential over the past four years. Most recently, he proposed that a grain terminal on the Beaufort Sea could be a cost-effective way to tackle a current grain backlog and get more of CanadaSA国际影视传媒檚 product to overseas markets.
SA国际影视传媒淚 just publish it as a future possibility,SA国际影视传媒 says Valentine, who studied mechanical engineering and with a focus on transportation at Carleton University, and has been researching CanadaSA国际影视传媒檚 transportation industry for the past two decades.
SA国际影视传媒淩ight now you've got, um, the federal government threatening to issue fines on the railways for not moving enough grain to the West Coast ports ... if things really get serious, if you know, if it cannot move enough to the rocky mountains through to those Pacific ports, there's an option up North.SA国际影视传媒
While the Northern Transportation Company operated barges along the Mackenzie and into the Beaufort Sea but wound down and finally went bankrupt in 2016, Valentine says the current situation invites a re-examination of the potential.
Earlier this month, 90 per cent of grain silos across Canada were sitting full. Spikes in demand for shipping grain, oil, lumber and ore have put considerable strain on CanadaSA国际影视传媒檚 two railways, Canadian National and Canadian Pacific.
Valentine says that if demand keeps up, resources wonSA国际影视传媒檛 get to port in a timely manner unless the railways lay down extra tracks SA国际影视传媒 as currently the routes are just single-tracks SA国际影视传媒 or unless shippers consider other opportunities, like going North.
One option he has floated is using the existing rail tracks to Hay River, now that CanadaSA国际影视传媒檚 export market is again high and then to ferry resources down the Mackenzie River to the Beaufort Sea and ship from there.
Another idea is to connect Lake Athabasca to Great Slave Lake using navigation locks, which are devices that raise and lower boats between stretches of water.
He says a precedent for how much traffic could be seen on the Mackenzie River has already been set on the Mississippi River in the U.S.
SA国际影视传媒淎 railway hopper car will carry about 4,000 cubic feet of grain whereas a single barge on the Mississippi system, these things can carry over 120,000 cubic feet of grain,SA国际影视传媒 says Valentine, adding the barges are often strung together there three abreast by five lengthwise.
He says there could be economic opportunities for floating storage near Tuktoyaktuk, if Canada shipped on the Mackenzie.
While that option might be expensive to get off the ground, Valentine says the economics could be there if the shipping route is used to its full potential.