The System in 2030 - Water
Routes
Waterborne transportation is an essential
component of the Gateway domestic logistics system. In addition to 33 million
tonnes of bulk cargo moved by tug and barge on the Fraser River, 13.5 million
passengers and 3.6 million vehicles are moved (2004) by:
BC
Ferries connecting the Gateway to Vancouver Island:
11 million passengers and 3.5 million
vehicles (automobiles, buses and trucks)
Containerized cargo services (short sea shipping) between the seaports and
inter-modal facilities: up to 100,000 TEU’s (trailers and railcars)
TransLink Seabus service in Burrard Inlet:
2.5 million passengers
Short Sea Shipping
Short Sea Shipping (SSS) refers to the
movement of containerized freight on coastal and inland waterways. Coastal SSS
includes both the movement of truck trailer combinations by BC Ferry Services
and trailers and railcars by Seaspan Coastal Intermodal ferries between Greater
Vancouver and Vancouver Island. Container traffic to Vancouver Island (typically
traveling via drop trailer), is expected to grow as overseas container movements
through the Vancouver Gateway increase, and as the population of Vancouver
Island expands.
SSS on inland waterways would move containers
by barge between deep-sea terminals and large freight forwarders, third party
logistics providers, import distribution companies and export consolidators.
Presently 35% of Gateway container traffic moves by heavy truck on an
increasingly congested urban road system. Recent studies indicate that a
significant proportion of this traffic could be shifted economically to SSS
routes, provided traffic densities could be increased sufficiently and other
issues, such as property taxation on gateway facilities and the availability and
cost of industrial lands, are resolved.
Container Operations Centres
By combining an efficient short-sea transfer
and storage terminal operation with efficient barge service to the deep-sea
terminals; and a rail inter-modal yard capable of transferring domestic and
marine containers directly to/from railcars, sufficient economies of scale could
be realized to allow commercially viable SSS operations. The availability of
industrial waterfront lands is a critical factor for the growth of SSS shipping
in the Gateway.