Sask. government looking to get climate inaction case thrown out - Action News
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Saskatchewan

Sask. government looking to get climate inaction case thrown out

The Saskatchewan government will argue Friday that a case being brought against it overalleged climate inaction should not go ahead.

Regina Court of King's Bench scheduled to hear arguments on Friday

A courthouse in Regina with a sign that says
A lawsuit claims that the Saskatchewan government's expansion of gas-fired electricity generation violates Section 7 of the Charter and Rights and Freedoms, which guarantees the right to life, liberty and security. (CBC)

The Saskatchewan government wants a lawsuit being brought against it overalleged climate inaction thrown out.

Climate Justice Saskatoon and seven Saskatchewan residents aged 15 to 80filed a lawsuit against the Saskatchewan government, SaskPowerand the Crown Investments Corporation of Saskatchewan in March 2023. The group claims that the government's expansion ofgas-fired electricity generation violates Section 7 of the Charter and Rights and Freedoms, which guarantees the right to life, liberty and security.

The Saskatchewan government has filed an application to strike the lawsuit, arguingthat the court doesn't have jurisdiction to rule on the province's decision to build new gas fired electricity stations.

The strike application will be argued at Court of King's Bench in Regina onFriday.

Amy Snider throws pottery in a studio at the University of Regina.
Amy Snider, one of the applicants in the court case, said her group's lawyers will be relying on precedent from similar lawsuits in other jurisdictions. (Ethan Williams/CBC)

Amy Snider, one of the complainants, said the group will argue against the government's application.

"I know I'm just one drop in the bucket or in the ocean, but I still feel as though I have to fight. Even if I know that we may end up going down fighting, I still have to be a part of it for things to be better," she said.

Snider said the government's strike application is a way to stall the case.

The lawsuitalso asksthe court to direct SaskPower to prepare formal plans to decarbonize the provincial electrical grid.

SaskPower says it is currently aiming to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by at least 50 per cent from 2005 levels by 2030 and be net zero by 2050.

In 2022,Saskatchewan's per capita emissions werethehighest in Canada at 64.4tonnes of CO2e 254 per centabove the national average of 18.2tonnes per capita, according toEnvironment and Climate Change Canada.

The lawsuitspecifically refers to projects like the Great Plains Power Station near Moose Jaw, which became operational earlier this year, and the Aspen Power Station proposed near Lanigan, which is expected to be finished by 2027, according to SaskPower's website updates.

When the lawsuit was filed, the Government of Saskatchewan saidthe province's decision to build natural gas-fired power plants, "is the most effective way to reduce greenhouse gas emissions without causing undue harm to our people and economy."

This is the first lawsuitlike this against Saskatchewan's government, but not the first in Canada.

Snider said the group's lawyers will be relying on precedentfrom similar lawsuits that tried to use the Charter Rights as an argument for climate action, filed against the Ontario and federal governments.

The province and its Crown corporations using gas fire plants instead of existing alternativesadds to emissions, Snider said.

"We believe that everyone, the government included, especially the government, is obligated to act in ways that don't make things worse and cause undue harm," she said.

There are currently three hearings that would need to happen prior to the complaint itself being heard. The first and the second involve the Saskatchewan government and SaskPowerapplying to strike the case. A third hearing would concern some alterations Climate Justice Saskatoon has asked to make to its original.

With files from The Morning Edition