A public opinion poll conducted by the Angus Reid Institute in partnership with Clear Seas Centre for Responsible Marine Shipping reveals that most Canadians believe transporting goods by sea is safe. Most say, the importance of marine shipping is growing, at the time, because uncertainty is intense among Canada and the United States trade.
The new public opinion poll, ‘Canadians’ attitudes towards marine shipping’, builds on a benchmark study on public attitudes about the shipping industry first conducted in March 2016.
The Canadian public places a higher degree of importance on marine shipping, at present, than it did back then. Greater numbers now say the industry is “critically important” to the Canadian economy, Canada’s access to imported goods, and Canada’s ability to access export markets than did so in 2016.
Nonetheless, as they were in 2016, Canadians remain concerned about the prospect of oil and fuel spills and water pollution, even as they are confident that shipping is generally safe and well-regulated.
What was new to the poll in 2018 was a question about the federal government’s Oceans Protection Plan. Results indicate that 14% of Canadians are certain they have heard of the plan, and for those who have not heard of it, once it is explained, most Canadians have a high level of confidence in the plan’s ability to increase marine shipping safety.
The public opinion poll has several important findings such as:
- An overwhelming majority of Canadians (94%) say marine shipping is either “very safe” (30%) or “generally safe” (64%).
- A significantly lower number, though still a majority, say they are “very” (18%) or “somewhat” (43%) confident in the safety of shipping petroleum products (61% overall, essentially unchanged from 2016’s confident result of 60%).
- Oil spills are still first priority concern, with more than half (54%) of Canadians mentioning the potential for such an incident as a major risk associated with the shipping industry.
- This concern may reflect an overestimation of the number of oil spills Canada has experienced in the last decade. When given the official definition of a “major spill” (one in which 700 tonnes of petroleum or more are spilled), most Canadians (68%) guess that there have been at least three in the last 10 years. In fact, there have been zero – a fact of which only 11% of Canadians knew.
- Three-quarters (75%) of Canadians say they are confident in the rules and regulations governing marine shipping safety in Canada today. This is a 10-point increase from 2016.
- However, many Canadians feel their provincial and federal governments pay too little attention to shipping safety (46% say this) or oversight and enforcement (45%).
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