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Alberta Appeal Court says federal environmental impact law not OK

Alberta’s top court said Tuesday that the federal government’s environmental impact law is unconstitutional and Ottawa almost immediately announced its plan to appeal.

 
PHOTO: Stock
 
 
The Alberta Court of Appeal’s strongly worded opinion said the Impact Assessment Act is an “existential threat” to the division of powers guaranteed by the Constitution and has taken a “wrecking ball” to Constitutional rights of the citizens of Alberta and Saskatchewan.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said during question period on Tuesday that his government would appeal the Alberta Court of Appeal’s ruling that the federal government’s environmental impact law is unconstitutional. Defending the act to the Conservatives, Trudeau recalled the Alberta court’s decision on the carbon tax. He said the federal government appealed that decision to the Supreme Court, which found in their favour. – May 10, 2022.

Alberta’s top court said Tuesday that the federal government’s environmental impact law is unconstitutional and Ottawa almost immediately announced its plan to appeal.

The Alberta Court of Appeal’s strongly worded opinion said the Impact Assessment Act is an “existential threat” to the division of powers guaranteed by the Constitution and has taken a “wrecking ball” to Constitutional rights of the citizens of Alberta and Saskatchewan.

The majority of the judges sided with Alberta, arguing that the legislation allowed Ottawa to put provinces in an “economic chokehold” and give it the means to chose winners and losers between them.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, later in the House of Commons, said that the law delivered on a promise to reform a “broken system and restore public trust in how decisions about major projects are made.”

“We will be appealing this decision,” he said.

“We obviously have an independent judicial system in this country and we respect the work that is being done,” Justin Trudeau told reporters Tuesday.

“But, just like when we saw the Alberta courts come out against the price on pollution, that we then referred to the Supreme Court, where it was determined that yes, the federal government has the responsibility to bring forward measures for the country, we continue to believe that ensuring environmental protection and predictability for investors on big projects is extremely important.”

The Alberta government, calling it a Trojan Horse, had challenged the act over what the province argued was an overreach into provincial powers. It asked the Appeal Court for a reference, or an opinion, which is not a binding decision and is used to guide governments in determining a law’s meaning or constitutionality.

The act, given royal assent in 2019, lists activities that trigger an impact review and allows Ottawa to consider the effects of new resource projects on a range of environmental and social issues, including climate change.

Alberta argued the law could use those concerns to greatly expand the range of federal oversight into areas of provincial jurisdiction.

The 204-page opinion said that legitimate concerns about the environment and climate change should not override the division of power.

“If the federal government believes otherwise, it should make the case for an increase in its jurisdiction to the Canadian public.”

A fourth judge signed off on that opinion with the exception of one section.

In a dissenting opinion, Justice Sheila Greckol said the federal environmental impact law is a valid exercise of constitutional authority.

“The complexities and the urgency of the climate crisis call for co-operative interlocking environmental protection regimes among multiple jurisdictions, each functioning at its highest and best within their constitutional jurisdiction,” Greckol wrote.

University of Calgary environmental law scholar Martin Olszynski pointed out the Alberta court also found federal legislation on carbon pricing unconstitutional, a decision the Supreme Court later overruled.

Olszynski suggested the Alberta court has concluded the federal government can’t decide on its own when national interests are at stake.

“They feel it is not OK for the federal government to assess projects simply because they have some adverse effect on federal jurisdiction,” he said.

“We seem to have the Court of Appeal imposing a judicial threshold for how much harm (Ottawa) has to tolerate.”

Olszynski added that much in the court’s opinion made speculative points about the danger of stranded assets in the oilpatch, the advantage to foreign producers if Alberta oil isn’t developed and the likely length of time it will take to transition away from fossil fuels.

“It suggests there’s something extrajudicial about the reasoning,” he said.

University of Ottawa law and economics professor Stewart Elgie said he expects the opinion to be overturned.

“(It) flies in the face of the Supreme Court of Canada’s 1992 decision upholding federal environmental assessment legislation as constitutional,” he wrote in an email.

“Ottawa has been assessing major projects across Canada for 30 years, as have provinces, and the sky hasn’t fallen.”

Duane Bratt, a political science professor at the University of Calgary, called the opinion a win for Alberta’s United Conservative government, which has characterized the law as the “No More Pipelines Act.”

But he added it may not do Alberta much good, since the court was careful to talk only about “intra-provincial” projects.

“Based on the (opinion), the Alberta government can build as many pipelines as they want, as long as they stay within the province of Alberta,” Bratt said. “I think the Supreme Court will uphold this.”

Meanwhile, Alberta Premier Jason Kenney was jubilant.

“I’m a little pumped up,” Kenney told reporters in Calgary.

“I’ve been waiting for this day for a long time, and it really matters. It matters for people who have been struggling in this province, it matters for the future of our economy, it matters as to whether or not this is actually a functioning federation.”

Kenney called this a “very important historic moment for Alberta’s fight for fairness in the Canadian federation.”

“This is a huge win for the people of Alberta, for their right to responsibly develop their resources — the resources that belong to the people of this province,” Kenney said.

Alberta’s premier called Bill C-69 — which he has titled the ‘no more pipelines act’ — a “massive overreach into provincial powers, creating huge uncertainty about how to develop natural resources and launch major projects right across our economy.”

Federal Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault, in a joint statement with Justice Minister David Lametti, defended the act.

“This act put in place better rules for major projects that restore trust, protect the environment, advance reconciliation and ensure good projects can move forward in a timely way.”

With files from Emily Mertz, Global News, and Dean Bennett, The Canadian Press

 

 
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