INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

36
INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012

Transcript of INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

Page 1: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

INTRODUCTION CANADIAN

ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT

(CEAA)

FEBRUARY 16, 2012

Page 2: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

Overview

• Legislating CEAA: Policy and Politics• Introduction to CEAA

– Purposes– Projects– Federal and Responsible Authorities– Triggers– Categories of EAs

• Scoping the Project and the Assessment

Page 3: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

Legislating CEAA: Policy and Politics

• First, get their attention (Rafferty-Alameda and Oldman cases)

• Identify clear problem for government requiring legislation as key policy solution

• Work closely with inside champions (Ray Robinson, FEARO)

• Build public support and line up allies (EA Caucus of RCEN)

• Neutralize bureaucratic and provincial opposition

Page 4: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

Purposes S.4(1)

• Ensures projects considered in careful and precautionary manner to ensure projects do not cause significant adverse environmental effects

• Encourage actions to promote sustainable development

• Eliminate unnecessary duplication• Promote fed – prov cooperation and

coordinated action

Page 5: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

Purposes S.4(1)

• Promote communication and cooperation with Aboriginal peoples

• Ensure projects do not cause extra-jurisdictional significant adverse environmental effects

• Ensure opportunities for timely and meaningful public participation throughout EA process

Page 6: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

Definitions S.2.(1)

• Environmental assessment – assessment of the environmental effects of

a project conducted under CEAA

• Environment – Land, water, air, atmosphere– All organic, inorganic matter, organisms– Interacting natural ecosystems

Page 7: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

Definitions S.2.(1)

• Environmental effects – Change project causes in environment– Any effect of such change on health, socio-

economic conditions, heritage, uses of lands for traditional purposes by aboriginal persons

– Change to project caused by environment

Page 8: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.
Page 9: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

Does the Act Apply?

Page 10: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

Is there a Project? S. 2.(1)

A project is either:

•Undertaking (e.g., construction, operation, modification, abandonment) in relation to a physical work

•Physical activity not relating to a physical work described in the Inclusion List Regulations (e.g., flying a supersonic aircraft)

Page 11: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

Is the Project Excluded? S.7

• Listed on Exclusion List Regulations/ Schedule (e.g., maintain physical work)

• National emergency for which special temporary measures are being taken under the Emergencies Act

• Emergency, and project will prevent damage to property, environment or in interest of public health or safety;

• Funding but essential details not known

Page 12: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

Is there a Federal Authority? S.2(1)

• A federal body such as a Minister, department, agency or parent Crown corporation.

• Federal authority definition refers to Federal Authorities Regulations and to schedules I and II of Financial Administration Act

Page 13: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

Is there a Trigger? S.5

• Federal authority exercises a duty, power or function in relation to a project:– Proposes a project as its proponent– Provides financial assistance to proponent

to enable project to be carried out– Disposes of interest in land to enable a

project to be carried out– Exercises regulatory function in relation to

a project listed in Law List Regulations

Page 14: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

Categories of EAs

• Screenings

• Comprehensive Studies

• Panel Reviews

• Mediations

Page 15: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

Screenings S. 18

• Public participation is unusual

• Responsible authority ensures screening is carried out, report prepared, information on electronic registry

• RA determines if follow-up program necessary

Page 16: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

Screenings S. 18

• Projects subject to CEAA subject to screening unless comprehensive study or referred to panel review or mediation

• Screenings - vast majority of CEAA EAs

• Identify/document environmental effects and significance, determine mitigation measures, recommend panel/mediation

• Vary in time, length, depth of analysis

Page 17: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

Model Class Screenings S. 19

• Generic assessment of all projects within a class, declared by Agency

• RA uses information contained in model report, prepares individual screening reports for projects within class to account for location-specific or project-specific information.

• Information is accessible on registry

Page 18: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

Replacement Class Screenings S. 19

• Provides a generic assessment of all projects within a class, declared by Agency

• No location-specific or project-specific information, so RA does not prepare screening reports

• Statement of projects listed on the registry

Page 19: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

Comprehensive Studies S.21

• Projects listed on Comprehensive Study List Regulations

• Larger projects having potential for significant or that may generate public concerns (e.g., mines, oil and gas projects, nuclear facilities)

• Public participation and follow-up program mandatory

Page 20: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

Comprehensive Studies S. 21

• Agency conducts comprehensive studies, except NEB and CNSC projects

• Agency coordinates with departments, provinces, ensures public participation

• Required to produce comprehensive study report (CSR) with 365 days

• Minister issues decision statement on significance, mitigation and follow-up

Page 21: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

Panel Reviews SS. 25, 28, 33 - 36

• Group of experts appointed by Minister

based on knowledge and expertise on referral from RA or at his/her discretion

• Appointed to assess, impartially, objectively project with likely significant adverse environmental effects, or where public concerns warrant

• Recommendations submitted to Minister and RA

Page 22: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

Panel Reviews SS. 25, 28, 33 - 36

• Hearings held with evidence presented

by proponent (Environmental Impact Statement) and members of public, with opportunities for questioning

• Review panel reports made public

• Funding made available to participants

• Joint review panels established with provincial/federal agencies s.40

Page 23: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

Mediations SS. 29 - 30

• Voluntary process of negotiation in which an independent and impartial mediator helps resolve project issues

• Interested parties must be identified and indicate willingness to participate

• Mediator appointed by Minister

• Mediator submits report, made public

• No mediation yet under CEAA

Page 24: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

Scoping the Project and the

Assessment

• Scoping includes:– Determining the scope of the project S. 15– Determining the scope of the assessment

S. 16 (Factors to be considered) r

Page 25: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

Scoping the Project S. 15

• Responsible authority determines project scope for screenings, Minister for panel reviews s. 15.(1)

• Two or more projects can be reviewed as single project in discretion of RA/Minister s.15.(2)

• All undertakings likely to be carried out in relation to physical work to be assessed s.15(3)

Page 26: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

Project Scoping Issues

Is the scope of the project:

•As the proponent proposed?

•Limited to the undertaking or physical activity that triggered the Act?

•Limited to that triggering undertaking plus other undertakings, activities or physical works?

Page 27: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

Project Scoping Issues

• What is the degree and nature of the discretion afforded to RA and Minister to determine project scope?

• What is the relationship between s.15.(1) and s. 15.(3)?

Page 28: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

Scoping the Assessment S. 16

• Once project scoped, assessment scoped under s. 16

• S.16.(1) mandatory factors: environ. effects, malfunctions, accidents, cumulative effects, significance, public comments, mitigation

• S.16.(2) mandatory factors (except screenings): purpose, need, alternative means, follow-up, capacity of renewable resources to meet needs

Page 29: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

Scoping Cases

• Sunpine (Friends of the West Country, 1999)

• True North (Prairie Acid Rain Coalition, 2006)

• Red Chris (Miningwatch Canada, 2011)

Page 30: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

Sunpine

• Application for NWPA permit for two bridges associated with logging road and forest cutting operations

• Does s.15.(3) require RA include road and forest cutting within scoped project?

• Gibson J. (FCTD) applied “independent utility test”: bridges have no indep. utility

• S. 15.(3) mandatory all undertakings in relation to physical work (the bridges) to be included

Page 31: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

Sunpine

• Federal Court of Appeal reversed, rejecting “independent utility test”

• Applied “life-cycle test” only those undertakings relating to the life-cycle of the physical work (such as operation, abandonment of bridge) not others

• But why does s. 15.(3) use “in relation to” rather than “of”?

Page 32: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

True North

• Oil sands project (already provincially approved) required Fisheries Act authorization because Bragg Creek was proposed to be destroyed

• Project scoped as “river destruction project” not “oil sands project” by DFO

• If scoped as oil sands project, comprehensive study triggered

Page 33: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

True North

• DFO - “scope of the project should be limited to those elements over which the federal government can assert authority”

• FCA – DFO’s decision to scope the project as river destruction reasonable

• Responsible authorities have broad discretion to scope project

• But scope not limited to matters within federal jurisdiction

Page 34: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

Red Chris

• Proposed B.C. copper and gold mine application for B.C. and Fisheries Act approvals

• DFO initially scoped project as mine and mill project requiring comprehensive study, later as stream destruction screening

Page 35: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

Red Chris

• SCC – CEAA requires that EA track be determined as per project as proposed

• Generally not open to responsible authority to change that level, reduce the scope of the project

• “Project” in s. 21 of the CEAA means “project as proposed” by the proponent, not “project as scoped” (former is consistent with definition of “project”)

Page 36: INTRODUCTION CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT ACT (CEAA) FEBRUARY 16, 2012.

Red Chris

• Where project as proposed is listed in the CSL, the requirements in s. 21 are mandatory

• Tracking and scoping are distinct steps

• No discretion with respect to assessment track, RA has discretion to determine the scope of the project for the purposes of assessment under s. 15(1)(a) of the CEAA