National Post (National Edition)

OTTAWA'S BILL C-69 INFRINGES ON PROVINCIAL RIGHTS, ALBERTA TELLS COURT.

NEB overhaul said to infringe on jurisdicti­on

- GEOFFREY MORGAN

CALGARY • Alberta's government is in court once again to fight Ottawa over laws it believes are an unconstitu­tional infringeme­nts on the province's ability to manage its natural resources.

The provincial government's lawyers made their case at the Alberta Court of Appeal in Edmonton on Tuesday that Ottawa's Impact Assessment Act, which overhauled the National Energy Board and replaced it with the Canada Energy Regulator, overreache­s into provincial jurisdicti­on over natural resource developmen­t.

Regardless of the outcome of the case at the Alberta Court of Appeals, Tuesday's reference case is widely expected to be appealed all the way to the Supreme Court. The case will determine whether the Act, better known as Bill C-69, does take regulation over natural resources away from provincial government­s.

“Bill C-69 seeks clearly to violate section 92-1A of the constituti­on because it gives the federal government power to step in and regulate right over top of us with respect to resource production,” Alberta Premier Jason Kenney told reporters Tuesday.

He noted the provincial government­s of Saskatchew­an and Ontario have sided with Alberta in this legal fight.

Kenney has been a vocal opponent of the regulatory overhaul, arguing that it relaxes timelines for major project assessment­s and allows federal ministers to stop a regulatory process with little warning, which would chase away investors.

“What it does is create even more investor uncertaint­y,” Kenney said. “It was hard enough to get projects approved, to build big things, to create jobs and to attract investment under the previous law. And now, with a law and a process that the federal government can stop at any time, at any reason at the whim of federal ministers, they have politicize­d the process and that creates uncertaint­y.”

Kenney pointed to Vancouver-based Teck Resources Ltd., which last year cancelled plans to build the $15.6-billion Frontier oilsands project as it awaited a decision from the federal government on whether it would be allowed to develop a project with the capacity to produce 260,000 barrels of oil per day. The company said the project had become “a lightning rod for the political controvers­ies of the day.”

Canada's largest oil-producing province is currently locked in three separate legal fights with Ottawa over what it considers unconstitu­tional federal intrusion into the province's oversight of the developmen­t of its natural resources.

In addition to its constituti­onal challenge of Bill C-69, Kenney's government has argued Ottawa's ban on oil tankers carrying bitumen in the waters off the coast of northern British Columbia is unconstitu­tional. The Supreme Court is also set to release a decision by the middle of March on whether Ottawa has the ability to impose carbon taxes on Alberta.

Legal scholars say Alberta's case against Bill C-69 will likely wind its way into the country's highest court.

“There's virtually no doubt that this reference case will go to the Supreme Court of Canada and that's the real show,” said David Wright, an assistant law professor at the University of Calgary, who added there were some commonalit­ies between the carbon tax case and the case against Bill-C69.

“The high-level question is what are the limits on federal jurisdicti­on between this broad space of shared jurisdicti­on over the environmen­t,” Wright said, noting that natural resource developmen­t is generally provincial territory but both levels of government are responsibl­e for environmen­tal oversight.

He said there is limited case law on this specific issue and so this reference case would, in the end, provide some clarity on the division of powers between the federal and provincial government, though he does expect Ottawa to ultimately win this case.

“I would say that the law and facts and structure of this specific statute is on the side of the federal government. It was carefully drafted to have strong constituti­onal footing on the government's side,” Wright said.

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 ?? JEFF MCINTOSH / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Pipeline supporters rally in Calgary at a public hearing of the Senate Committee on Energy, the Environmen­t and Natural Resources regarding Bill C-69 in April 2019.
JEFF MCINTOSH / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Pipeline supporters rally in Calgary at a public hearing of the Senate Committee on Energy, the Environmen­t and Natural Resources regarding Bill C-69 in April 2019.

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