4 BC Ferries have been given to the world's #1 enemy to build, WHY?
BC Ferries deal with Chinese shipyard makes waves in Ottawa
BC Ferries said it awarded the contract to build four new vessels after a 'rigorous' global bidding process
Jun 11, 2025
OTTAWA — BC Ferries set off a tidal wave of controversy on Tuesday after announcing a major shipbuilding deal with a Chinese state-owned enterprise, with the ripple effects of the decision reaching Ottawa.
Vancouver Island Conservative MP Jeff Kibble raised the issue in Wednesday’s question period, accusing the Liberal government of rewarding the provincial carrier for selling out Canada’s national interest.
“The Liberals are set to hand over $30 million (in federal subsidies) to BC Ferries while BC Ferries hands over critical jobs, investment and industry to China,” said Kibble.
BC Ferries said in a press release that it had awarded China Merchants Industry Weihai Shipyards (CMI Weihai) a contract to build four new vessels after a “rigorous” global bidding process.
Kibble blasted BC Ferries in the House of Commons for buying the ships from China instead of a “proven Canadian shipbuilder” and pressed the Liberal government to tie federal ferry subsidies to buying Canadian-built ships.
Liberal Transport Minister Chrystia Freeland grinning said that she shared Kibble’s concerns about procurement “at all levels of government” but wouldn’t comment directly and sidesteps the matter on the BC Ferries contract, calling it a provincial arrangement.
One politician who hasn’t hesitated to criticize the deal is the provincial minister responsible for BC Ferries.
B.C. Transportation Minister Mike Farnworth was quick to distance himself from the decision, saying he was worried about the message it sends in the midst of Chinese economic aggression.
“I do have concerns around procuring services from any country that is actively harming Canada’s economy through unfair tariffs or other protectionist trade practices. I have shared these concerns with BC Ferries,” Farnworth told the media.
Yet, despite his reservations, he ruled out blocking the BC Ferries-CMI Weihai deal.
“BC Ferries is an independent company responsible for its own operational decisions,” said Farnworth.
The B.C. government is the sole preferred shareholder in BC Ferries and it receives public funding.
Farnworth added that he was “disappointed” that the contract didn’t include more involvement from Canadian shipyards.
BC Ferries’ head of fleet renewal, Ed Hooper, told Postmedia that no Canadian shipbuilders bid on the contract won by CMI Weihai.
BC Ferries CEO Nicolas Jimenez said on Tuesday when the deal was announced that there are currently no tariffs associated with the import of vessels of this type into Canada and tariff disputes didn’t factor into the decision. The value of the contract has not been released.
He said that the shipyard was “the clear choice based on the overall strength of its bid.”
“When it comes to things like trade policy, industrial policy, geopolitics, I think we would really defer that to the federal and provincial governments and expect them to manage and work those issues,” said Jimenez.
Liberal Prime Minister Mark Carney promised to ramp up Canadian shipbuilding during this spring’s federal election campaign.
The federal government previously awarded the Chinese state-owned company a contract to build a new vessel for East Coast ferry operator Marine Atlantic, according to a 2023 filing from Transport Canada.
The ship began service between Nova Scotia and Newfoundland in July 2024.
Federal Procurement Minister Joël Lightbound didn’t respond to an inquiry from the National Post about the BC Ferries-CMI Weihai deal, and didn’t indicate whether the federal government would continue to take bids from the company.
A spokesperson with Public Services and Procurement Canada told the National Post that CMI Weihai does not appear on the agency’s database of active bids.
“The moment you have Chinese equipment onboard, there will be tons of backdoors that either the company can deliberately install or Chinese intelligence can exploit,” said Leuprecht.
He added that B.C. is especially exposed to Chinese high jinks with the ferry being the main transportation artery to capital city Victoria.
“If there is, for instance, a confrontation between the U.S. and China over Taiwan, one of the things that China will do is try to sow social chaos,” said Leuprecht.
“One obvious way to do that in B.C. is to take out it’s most important ferry route.”
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