Vancouver Gas Docks

Pippen

Well-Known Member
Just a heads up in case anyone gets caught a little short in the ole "petro" department. Looks like Chevron in Coal Harbor may be it.........

Esso pulls plug on floating fuel stations

Joanne Lee-Young, Vancouver Sun
Published: Tuesday, November 13, 2007

There is a David-versus-Goliath battle underway at two Lower Mainland marina hubs, with boaters, island-commuters and gas station operators taking on Imperial Oil to protect the only remaining, convenient fuel access they have.

The oil giant owns the floating Esso gas stations in West Vancouver's Fisherman's Cove and Vancouver's False Creek, as well as a few others around B.C. Since last year, however, it has been trying to get out of the dwindling business completely.

"From time to time, we conduct reviews of our business and look at our marine services network. It no longer fit in our core business, so we decided to exit that segment," said Calgary-based Gordon Wong, a spokesperson for Imperial Oil. "[In B.C.], seven sites are being impacted."

The problem at Fisherman's Cove and at False Creek is that Esso is the only player. Without the company's presence, there is no other option, leaving boaters in those areas to precariously lug jerry cans of gasoline from land to sea in order to fill up their tanks.

"Depending on your boat, you might be able to race daylight to get to another station, but people are already [getting ready by] packing fuel by hand. And they are spilling it. I see dozens of people doing this. It's a huge safety hazard," said Andy Mosier, head of yacht sales at Thunderbird Marina near Fisherman's Cove.

Bruce Falkins, who has run the Esso float fuel station at Fisherman's Cove for 25 years, said that Imperial originally offered to sell him the station and let him continue operating it. Later, he was informed that "because of [Imperial's] concerns with their future liability with the structure, they were cancelling the sale."

"Instead, they are going to completely destroy it," in early January, and take along a "perfectly good floating marine structure," said Falkins.

Some 2,000 boaters and commuters use the Fisherman's Cove gas station, according to Falkins. About the same number use the False Creek location. There is a small groundswell brewing as consumers at both locations voice their complaints directly to Imperial, sign petitions and call on politicians to intervene. A few have even offered to drum up investment dollars to help out operators, said Falkins.

"This is the situation in the winter. A lot of people don't even know this is going on, and won't realize until it gets busy in the summer. Then, they will go and try to get gas and there will be nowhere to get it," said Mosier. "It's a big hazard."

Falkins said that because of some complaints, "a vice president [at Imperial] has said, 'I need to be sure we are doing the right thing here in having these barges destroyed rather than having them sold to the operators.' So, they said that management would come back to us [later this week] with an answer as to whether they would sell or destroy them. The answer right now is that they are going to destroy them."

Wong declined to discuss the company's dealings with individual retail operators, but some of them, who didn't want to be named because they are still in negotiations with Imperial, said that talks are underway to turn select locations into "unbranded ones."

This would allow a physical gas station to continue running, but it would operate without a trace of Esso signage or other identification. In other cases, outright closures of Esso stations have been tough luck for the operator, but consumers could, at least, still turn to a nearby competitor for gas.

Falkins emphasized that in addition to providing fuel for boaters and commuters, these remaining fuel floats are used by various coast guard and emergency service providers. "We have often gone out to help sailors," he said in an interview. As well, in an area of mostly "expensive and private waterfront property, we offer a meeting point that is publicly accessible."

Wong, the spokesman, revealed little about the company's efforts to take a second look at the situation, saying only that "there is nothing to preclude anyone or any organization from starting a business in this area if they see an opportunity here. Our normal process when we close a site is to do an assessment of equipment that is there, to do an environmental assessment, to remove the equipment and develop a plan for a cleanup. That is us taking that is us taking responsibility for a location where we have operated for a number of years."
 
...ya, Esso is pulling them all - We just lost the marina station that was beside us down at the Brechin boat ramp in Nanaimo. Kinda sucks for the folks that have their boats moored...think of all the accedental spills from boaters trying to fill up via jerry cans in the future.

Cheers,
RVP. ;)
 
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