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Environmental Response

The Canadian Coast Guard Environmental Response program aims to reduce the impact of marine pollution spills on:

We oversee the response to spills from ships and unknown sources in Canadian waters.

Emergency planning

To stay prepared for emergency response, we:

Figure 1: Map showing the Canadian Coast Guard’s environmental response facilities and equipment caches located across Canada.

Figure 1: Map showing the CCG’s ER facilities and equipment described below
Text description of Figure 1: Map showing the Canadian Coast Guard’s environmental response facilities and equipment caches located across Canada.

Map of environmental response equipment for Canadian Coast Guard depot sites. The legend shows:

  • staffed ship facilities in blue
  • staffed shore facilities in red
  • unstaffed caches in green
  • seasonal unstaffed caches in white

Emergency response

We receive all reports of marine pollution in Canadian waters and assess the risk of pollution. We then may:

the clean-up activities to ensure appropriate response.

Incident Command System

To conduct these response operations, we use the Incident Command System. This system is recognized internationally and helps us work with all of our partners.

Regional response teams

Our regional response teams:

Polluter’s responsibilities

Ships and oil handling facilities must:

We will conduct the clean-up or hire a designated response organization, if:

Canada follows the “polluter pays” principle. This means the polluter is responsible for all the cost of pollution. If the Coast Guard has to conduct clean-up, we may also recover the cost through the Ship-source Oil Pollution Fund.

Our partners

To ensure that the response is efficient and appropriate, we work with:

The Canadian Coast Guard has an agreement with the United States Coast Guard to respond in U.S. waters, if they require our support.

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