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Vancouver strike continues to block sulphur loadings

  • : Fertilizers
  • 23/07/11

The ongoing Vancouver port worker's strike continues to stall sulphur exports from the port — with no vessels loaded since the start of the strike.

Vancouver port workers began a strike on 1 July, delaying sulphur loadings from the Canadian west coast port as the International Longshore and Warehouse Union announced the strike after negotiations failed to settle the terms of a collective agreement for port workers' employment contracts.

No sulphur has been loaded at Vancouver since the start of the month, delaying the usual export schedule and leading to increased molten sulphur railcar loadings for export to the US market. The limited rail capacity of specialised molten sulphur tankcars is a bottleneck that make this route somewhat inflexible for increasing movements rapidly.

Additional tonnage is building up at forming facilities in Alberta, and some additional pouring to block is expected to be taking place at existing blocks.

Sulphur exports through Vancouver totalled 1.4mn t in the five months between January and May this year, with the main markets being China at 533,000t, Australia at 350,000t, Chile at 161,000t and New Caledonia at 105,000t.

Canada is also the largest single producer of potash, and Vancouver handles the majority of the country's potash exports. The potash market is also impacted by the lack of product loadings, particularly if the strike continues.


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