Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Edmonton

Alberta's UCP, environmental groups to intervene in Saskatchewan carbon tax case

Alberta's United Conservative Party will be allowed to intervene in an upcoming court case involving the Province of Saskatchewan and Ottawa over the national carbon tax.

Federal government opposed request by UCP to intervene on side of Saskatchewan

A dump trump stops in front of a large oil sands extraction facility. A large plume of smoke billows rightwarsd from a column.
A dump truck works near the Syncrude oil sands extraction facility near Fort McMurray in 2014. Saskatchewan's Court of Appeal is allowing Alberta's UCP to intervene in a court case over the national carbon tax. (Jason Franson/The Canadian Press)

Alberta's United Conservative Party will be allowed to intervene in an upcoming court case involving the Province of Saskatchewan and Ottawa over the national carbon tax.

Saskatchewan's Court of Appeal ruled all 16 applicants will be allowed to intervene in thecase to be heardin mid-February.

Those include the David Suzuki Foundation, the Assembly of First Nations, as well as the provincial attorneys general of Ontario, New Brunswick and British Columbia.

In April, Saskatchewan asked the court to rule on whether the federal government's plan to implement a carbon tax on the province is constitutional.

"Whatever judgment comes out of the Saskatchewan Court of Appeal, we will be able to say that everybody who wanted to be heard has been heard," said Saskatchewan Justice Minister Don Morgan.

'Everybody's got a sense you have to do something about emissions, you have to do something about carbon, but a carbon tax I don't think is the right solution,' said Don Morgan, Saskatchewan's justice minister. (Matt Garand/CBC)

"I think it's an indication that all across Canada, people are asking questions about it," he said. "The federal government has a right to tax, but not to tax differently across Canada."

He expects the case, along with a similar challenge in Ontario, will eventually be heard bythe Supreme Court of Canada.

Morgan and the Saskatchewan Party government arguetheir "Prairie Resilience" emissions reduction strategy is as effective as the federal carbon pricing scheme.

"We're feeling pretty strong about the position we've got," said Morgan. "I don't think the position put forward by any of these entities would challenge the argument."

Saskatchewan's Court of Appeal in Regina has set aside two days in February to hear arguments from all 16 intervenors. Those include:

  • Attorney General of Ontario.
  • Agricultural Producers Association of Saskatchewan.
  • Canadian Environmental Law Association and Environmental Defence Canada Inc.
  • Attorney General of New Brunswick.
  • Saskatchewan Power Corporation and SaskEnergy Incorporated.
  • Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation.
  • Canadian Taxpayers Federation.
  • United Conservative Association (Alberta).
  • Canadian Public Health Association.
  • Assembly of First Nations.
  • Climate Justice Saskatoon.
  • Attorney General of British Columbia.
  • Intergenerational Climate Coalition.
  • David Suzuki Foundation.
  • Ecofiscal Commission of Canada.
  • International Emissions Trading Association.

The federal government had opposed a request by the UCP to be an intervener on the side of Saskatchewan.

UCP Leader Jason Kenney, a former federal cabinet minister, has tweeted he is pleased with the ruling and would be stepping up to fight for Albertans.

A written judgment indicated all submissions from intervenors must belimited to legal issues surrounding the tax.