Wednesday, June 10, 2026
ADVT 
National

Garbage-hauling Ship Arrives In Canada After Journey From Philippines

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Jul, 2019 01:11 AM

    VANCOUVER — An infamous load of Canadian trash that had been rotting in the Philippines for more than five years has come full circle, arriving by ship at a port south of Vancouver on Saturday morning.


    The Anna Maersk arrived at Deltaport near the Tsawwassen ferry terminal just after 7 a.m., carrying nearly 70 containers and 1,500 tons of Canadian refuse.


    The ship began unloading shortly afterwards, and the trash will be held at the terminal before it can be disposed of at an incineration facility in Burnaby, B.C, according to Canadian officials.


    Just over a hundred containers of Canadian garbage arrived in the Philippines in 2013 and 2014, exported by a private Canadian company and falsely labelled as plastics for recycling.


    Inspections later revealed that much of what was inside the containers was regular trash, including dirty diapers, kitchen waste and electronic items.


    The garbage set off a political row between the two countries, culminating in a threat by Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte to send it back to Canada himself.


    "Prepare a grand reception," he said. "Eat it if you want to."


    Canada is a signatory of the 1992 Basel Convention, which requires informed consent before a developed country can export hazardous waste to a developing country, and in 2016 a Philippine court ordered the garbage returned to Canada.


    Initially, Canada tried to negotiate with the Philippines to dispose of the trash locally, and a portion of it was, but local environmental groups objected.


    Canada missed the president's May 15 deadline to remove the rest of the garbage and Duterte recalled the Philippines' ambassador and consuls from Canada.


    The garbage left June 1 and was transferred onto the Anna Maersk on June 8 in Taiwan for the voyage home across the Pacific Ocean.


    The cost to Canada is $1.14 million for shipping and another $375,000 for the garbage to be burned in the Metro Vancouver incinerator.


    "The Government of Canada is looking at ways to hold the responsible parties to account," a spokesperson from the Minsitry of Environment and Climate Change.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Legalization Sparks Boom In Once-Stigmatized Field Of Marijuana Research

    "There were times when I was told you couldn't even use 'cannabis' and 'research' in the same sentence," he recalled.

    Legalization Sparks Boom In Once-Stigmatized Field Of Marijuana Research

    Mannequin Heads In Dumpster Give Delta, B.C., Cop A Fright After Recent Clothing Bin Deaths

    DELTA, B.C. — A routine patrol of an alley in downtown Ladner, B.C., gave police pause late Monday evening.

    Mannequin Heads In Dumpster Give Delta, B.C., Cop A Fright After Recent Clothing Bin Deaths

    Vancouver Police Asking For Public Help In Locating Federal Offender Floyd Quincey Herbert

    Vancouver police are asking for help in locating a federal offender who failed to return to his halfway-house early Saturday morning.

    Vancouver Police Asking For Public Help In Locating Federal Offender Floyd Quincey Herbert

    Study Shows Black Bears Need A Variety Of Salmon Species To Be Healthy

    Study Shows Black Bears Need A Variety Of Salmon Species To Be Healthy
    Black bears need access to different species of salmon rather than huge numbers of a single variety in order to be healthy, a new study by Canadian researchers indicates.

    Study Shows Black Bears Need A Variety Of Salmon Species To Be Healthy

    Searchers Scour Area North Of Horseshoe Bay, B.C., For Woman Missing Overnight

    Searchers Scour Area North Of Horseshoe Bay, B.C., For Woman Missing Overnight
    Search and rescue team members in Lions Bay, B.C., are taking advantage of daylight to conduct an intensive search of the village, just north of Horseshoe Bay.

    Searchers Scour Area North Of Horseshoe Bay, B.C., For Woman Missing Overnight

    Five Things About What Rahaf Mohammed Alqunun Was Running From In Saudi Arabia

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced Friday that Canada would accept 18-year-old Rahaf Mohammed Alqunun as a refugee after she fled Saudi Arabia for Thailand and launched a Twitter campaign to win her freedom from a barricaded airport hotel room.  

    Five Things About What Rahaf Mohammed Alqunun Was Running From In Saudi Arabia