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UBC loses appeal over ammonia dump in Vancouver creek that killed fish

A man on a skateboard and a young woman pass large letters spelling out UBC at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, B.C., Sunday, Nov. 22, 2015. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck

The University of British Columbia has lost an appeal of a hefty fine and conviction over an ammonia release that ended up in a fish-bearing streaming.

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The university and CIMCO Refrigeration were charged under the Fisheries Act last year after ammonia was deposited into a sewer near the university’s Thunderbird Arena, which found its way into the Fraser River and killed 70 fish.

CIMCO Refrigeration was fined $800,000 by the provincial court after pleading guilty to discharging the chemical into the storm drain.

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The university was fined $1.2 million, but appealed its conviction and fine to B.C. Supreme Court, arguing that it couldn’t be proven that the ammonia had entered the river, killing the fish.

In a decision released on Tuesday, Madam Justice Neena Sharma dismissed the university’s claims that the trial judge made errors when considering the evidence.

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The judge refused to decrease the fine and also dismissed the university’s appeals of the conviction under the Fisheries Act.

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