Close X
Friday, October 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ottawa's Carbon-pricing Law Valid, Ontario's Top Court Rules

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Jun, 2019 11:51 PM

    TORONTO — The federal government's carbon pricing scheme is constitutionally sound and has the critical purpose of fighting climate change, Ontario's top court ruled in a split decision on Friday.


    The Greenhouse Gas Pollution Pricing Act, enacted in April, is within Parliament's jurisdiction to legislate in relation to matters of "national concern," Chief Justice George Strathy wrote on behalf of the court.


    "Parliament has determined that atmospheric accumulation of greenhouse gases causes climate changes that pose an existential threat to human civilization and the global ecosystem," Strathy said.


    "The need for a collective approach to a matter of national concern, and the risk of non-participation by one or more provinces, permits Canada to adopt minimum national standards to reduce (greenhouse gas) emissions."


    Ontario's Progressive Conservative government under Premier Doug Ford, who calls the carbon charge an illegal tax, had argued the act is a violation of the Constitution because it allows the federal government to intrude on provincial jurisdiction. During four days of submissions in April, Ontario insisted the act would undermine co-operative federalism.


    Provincial lawyers told the Court of Appeal the federal government would end up with the power to regulate almost every facet of life — such as when you can drive, where you can live, or whether you can have a wood-burning fireplace. They also argued the province has its own approach to the climate-change issue.


    For their part, federal lawyers argued the province was fearmongering. The law, they said, would not result in an expansion of constitutional powers that would give Ottawa carte blanche to regulate issues that fall within provincial jurisdiction. The act was a legitimate response to potentially catastrophic climate change, federal lawyers argued.


    The majority of the Appeal Court agreed with Ottawa and rejected Ontario's contention that the carbon levy is an illegal tax.


    "The charges imposed by the act are themselves constitutional," Strathy wrote. "They are regulatory in nature and connected to the purposes of the act. They are not taxes."


    The effect of the charge is to put a price on carbon pollution, thereby limiting access to a scarce resource: the atmosphere’s capacity to absorb greenhouse gases, Strathy said in the decision. The pricing mechanisms also "incentivize behavioural changes," he said.


    No single province or group of provinces can establish minimum national standards to reduce emissions, the court said. Their efforts can be undermined by the "action or by the inaction" of other provinces.


    "The reduction of (greenhouse) emissions cannot be dealt with in a piecemeal manner," the court said. "It must be addressed as a single matter to ensure its efficacy. The establishment of minimum national standards does precisely that."


    In a dissenting opinion, Justice Grant Huscroft said climate change did not amount to an "emergency case" and warned against allowing rhetoric to colour the constitutional analysis.


    "Carbon pricing is only one approach to addressing (greenhouse gas) emissions — one of many policy options that might be chosen, whether alone or as part of a broader strategy," Huscroft said. "There are many ways to address climate change and the provinces have ample authority to pursue them."


    The federal act currently only applies in four Conservative provinces — Ontario, Manitoba, New Brunswick and Saskatchewan — which Ottawa says don't meet national standards.


    In all, 14 interveners — among them some provinces, Indigenous groups and environmental and business organizations — lined up to defend or attack the law, with most siding with Ottawa. Indigenous groups, for example, stressed their vulnerability to global warming that they said could destroy their way of life.


    Some observers said the Ontario challenge was more about politics than the environment.


    The issue is expected to be ultimately decided before the country's top court. In May, Saskatchewan's top court in a 3-2 decision upheld the carbon pricing law as constitutional in a similar case. The Supreme Court of Canada has already said it will hear Saskatchewan's challenge of that ruling in December — after the October federal election.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    'Not Trying To Be On The Front Page:' Toronto Mayor John Tory On Re-Election Bid

    'Not Trying To Be On The Front Page:' Toronto Mayor John Tory On Re-Election Bid
    TORONTO — Headlines and TV highlight clips are overrated, Mayor John Tory is saying at a Toronto diner shortly after he took his mother to vote in front of photographers ahead of Monday's municipal election.

    'Not Trying To Be On The Front Page:' Toronto Mayor John Tory On Re-Election Bid

    B.C. Police Watchdog Says Court Orders Vancouver Police To Co-Operate With Probe

    B.C. Police Watchdog Says Court Orders Vancouver Police To Co-Operate With Probe
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's police watchdog says a court has backed its investigation into a fatal shooting by police two years ago.

    B.C. Police Watchdog Says Court Orders Vancouver Police To Co-Operate With Probe

    B.C. Teen Gives Away Tickets To Ellen Degeneres Show, Plans O Canada Welcome

    VANCOUVER — A 14-year-old girl's quest to give away two tickets to Ellen Degeneres's appearance in Vancouver has turned into an 82-ticket giveaway complete with all the "winners" singing O Canada before show time.

    B.C. Teen Gives Away Tickets To Ellen Degeneres Show, Plans O Canada Welcome

    One Smart Cookie: Edmonton Girl Guide Sells Out Of Cookies Near Cannabis Store

    As people lined up to buy cannabis at one of six Edmonton cannabis stores that opened Wednesday a small entrepreneur stood ready to capitalize on what could be expected to be customers' future need for a sweet snack.

    One Smart Cookie: Edmonton Girl Guide Sells Out Of Cookies Near Cannabis Store

    Manitoba Man Sentenced To Eight Years In 'Horrific' Death Of His Young Daughter

    WINNIPEG — A Manitoba man has been sentenced to eight years for the death of his 21-month-old daughter after failing to report abuse the judge called horrific and noticeable.

    Manitoba Man Sentenced To Eight Years In 'Horrific' Death Of His Young Daughter

    New Trial Ordered For Cop Acquitted Of Sexually Assaulting Intoxicated Woman

    New Trial Ordered For Cop Acquitted Of Sexually Assaulting Intoxicated Woman
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — A new trial has been ordered in the high-profile case of a Newfoundland police officer acquitted of sexually assaulting an intoxicated woman he drove home from a bar while on duty.

    New Trial Ordered For Cop Acquitted Of Sexually Assaulting Intoxicated Woman