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JUDY LINDSAY
Vancouver Sun
Edition: 1*
Page: D1
October 01, 1991
Section Heading: Business
Word Count: 561
Text:
BUSINESS; COLUMN
THE DEAL that keeps the Versatile drydock in Vancouver harbor shows some astuteness on the
part of the federal government.
It's true that Ottawa is paying another $8 million for the drydock,
having already paid $40 million for it a decade ago. If the $8 million had not been forthcoming,
however, Versatile Pacific Shipyards proposed to sell it offshore, leaving the port of Vancouver without a
facility for repairing big ships.
Better to spend the money to get the drydock out of hock than to see an important asset, primarily
owned by Canadian taxpayers, end up in another country.
The end of the government's days as a
drydock owner are in sight, however. The deal calls for Seaspan and Allied Shipbuilders to acquire
ownership of the drydock over the next 10 years, and they have to cover any operating losses.
So
Ottawa moved to protect an investment while putting the burdens of ownership on the two-company
consortium.
This is not what the local shipyards had in mind. They had pictured the government
continuing to own the drydock while making it available to local yards for repair work.
But when
the dust settled late last week, Ottawa was fast fading from the picture, the two private companies had put
up $1.8 million and were looking at ownership.
The reason they weren't anxious to own it is that
the drydock's commercial viability is questionable. Versatile president Peter Quinn says the dock is
expensive to operate and faces tough foreign competition.
That a difficult selling job lies ahead is
indicated by the $4.3 million in the deal for extraordinary start-up and marketing costs.
The province
of B.C. put up $6 million to make the deal work, for which it has received preferred shares in the
consortium. This, according to a press release, will allow the government to receive "a fair share of the
profits without exposing the government to further liabilities."
That will be a share of nothing if
the consortium is no sharper than Versatile at drumming up business.
*
On becoming premier,
Rita Johnston denounced hand-outs to business. Last week she said she wouldn't be making gifts of money
to try to win votes. Yet here is her government, providing $6 million to the Vancouver-based marine
industry.
She hasn't been making any hay out of the drydock deal because of the total absence of job
figures. No one can say how many people will be kept employed at the facility, or at suppliers.
A
superferry announcement would make a big splash, however, as building one of these giants requires
1,600 person-years of work. The first of two superferries - 470 cars, 2,000 passengers - is under
construction at various yards, at a cost of $120 million.
It's hard to see how Johnston, leading a
campaign in desperate need of good news, can resist announcing the second superferry soon to try to
boost the Socreds' chances.
*
Sometimes the oddest things turn out to be good news. That's the
case with the new stumpage figures released by the forests ministry.
Forest companies have been hit
with an average increase of 15 per cent in the price they have to pay the government for timber. Despite
the recession in the industry, most of the companies will grin and bear it.
Given the battle being
waged with their American competitors over so-called "subsidized" Canadian lumber, the B.C. industry
was looking for an increase, as required by the stumpage formula, and not for a break on its timber costs.
Copyright Vancouver Sun 1991
Descriptors:
Canadian Newspapers
© 1997 Southam Inc. All rights reserved.
DIALOG® File
Number 727 Accession Number 503448