Chemical weapon dump discovered off B.C. coast
Last updated Nov 14 2005 07:30 AM PST
CBC News

A Canadian Forces team has found a stash of old chemical weapons on the ocean floor off the west coast of Vancouver Island.

Officials say the weapons were found in June following a review of military archives, but won't say exactly where they were found. Canada and the U.S. dumped explosives, mustard gas and other chemical agents off both coasts of North America following the Second World War.

Chris Hough, who heads the chemical and biological weapons disposal project at the Department of National Defence, says the dump site in in deep water about 160 kilometres off the B.C. coast – and is unlikely to pose a threat to human health.

"There is one location off the west coast of Canada where agents were disposed. We're still looking into that site to determine what the issue is there, if there is a risk."

But Craig Williams, the director of a U.S,-based watchdog agency, says very little is known about the environmental impact of such sites.

"These ocean dump sites certainly have more questions than answers and I don't believe there's anyone on the planet who can identify the potential ecological impact of these substances with precision. " Hough says his people still are not sure which country's chemical weapons have been found.

"Whether or not they came from an American source in the very beginning ,or if they are strictly Canadian, we can't say emphatically if that is the case."

The military says it needs to gather more information about the site before a safe cleanup can be considered.