Posted - July 30, 2012 5:21 pm - by
Some Alaska communities are pushing back against a new requirement
that ships sailing within 200 miles of the coast burn cleaner fuel. They
say the rule, which goes into effect Wednesday, Aug.1st, will hurt
cruise traffic and increase shipping costs.
One community is Skagway, where tourism dominates the summer economy.
“It takes years to get a cruise line. And it takes a second to drive
one away,” says Steve Hites, owner of the Skagway Streetcar Company and a
member of the town’s Port Commission.
He’s telling Skagway’s assembly about new air-emission limits set by
the federal Environmental Protection Agency. They cover ships in coastal
Emission Control Areas, also called ECAs.
Hites says cleaner fuel is more expensive, and cruise lines will pass that on to customers.
“The cost of the ECA on a cruise ticket could be $150, or three times
the cost of the Alaska head tax. We lost five big ships because of the
head tax. By extrapolation, will we lose 15 ships?” he asks.
Complete Post at:
http://www.ktoonews.org/2012/07/30/towns-take-on-new-federal-maritime-emission-limits/
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