Environmental emergencies include hazardous or toxic spills, discharges, emissions, as well as dyke and dam failures, debris flows and floods.
This number connects with the Emergency Coordination Centre (part of Emergency Management BC (EMBC)); the dispatcher will notify the appropriate Environmental Emergency Response Officer.
If you require more information about environmental incident notification, please see Environment Contacts - Regions to find information about the provincial regional office nearest you.
Marine spills in international waters on the Pacific West Coast (excluding Alaska) should be reported to this number.
Calls are automatically routed to the appropriate state or provincial emergency dispatch service, depending on the location of the caller; in B.C., the caller is automatically routed to EMBC’s Emergency Coordination Centre. Persons along the west coast of North America can use this single reporting number instead of knowing the emergency number for each state or province. The call can be made via radio-telephone, cellular phone, pay-phone, or regular phone.
Over 4,000 environmental emergencies are reported annually; approximately 95% are spills of oil and hazardous materials. A person in possession, charge or control of a substance is required by law to report a spill (or pending spill).
Contact the Canadian Coast Guard with reports regarding pollution or threats of pollution in the marine environment:
Report a spill and review regulations on a mobile phone application:
Report known or suspected polluters anonymously:
For other pollution concerns, contact:
For emergency preparedness information, planning and preparedness info:
For provincial alerts and emergencies:
Report a spill and review regulations on a mobile phone app:
For more information about about environmental concerns in your area, please contact the regional office nearest you: