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Politics

Supreme Court dismisses B.C.'s bid to save bill blocking Trans Mountain project

The Supreme Court of Canada has dismissedB.C.'s request to appeal a lower court decision that quashed provincial legislation designed to block the Trans Mountain expansion project.

'Today it's heavy oil, tomorrow it could be anything else,' Justice Malcolm Rowe says at hearing

Chief Justice Richard Wagner reads the Supreme Court's decision

5 years ago
Duration 0:43
Chief Justice Richard Wagner reads the Supreme Court's decision

The Supreme Court of Canada has dismissedB.C.'sappeal of a lower court decision that quashed provincial legislation designed to block the Trans Mountain expansion project.

In aunanimous decision, Chief JusticeRichard Wagner said the court will let the B.C. Court of Appeal decision stand.

The decision clears yet another legal hurdle for the long-delayed pipeline project. A separate Federal Court of Appeals case on the project, which considers Indigenous issues,is still pending.

The decision, issued from the bench on the same day legal counsel delivered oral arguments, is a blow to B.C. Premier John Horgan, who has sought to stop construction of the expansion. If built, the pipeline will carry nearly a million barrels of oil from Alberta's oilpatch to the B.C. coast each day for export to Asian markets.

Horganpromised in the 2017 election campaign"to use every tool in our tool box to stop" the construction of the Trans Mountain expansion.

The court's ruling was not unexpected, given how poorly the B.C. case fared in front of the justices Thursday.

The B.C. NDP government had drafted amendments to provincial environmental law to all but ban interprovincial shipments of heavy oil bitumen and diluted bitumen and other "hazardous substances" through pipelines, including the Crown-owned Trans Mountain expansion project.

The current route of the Trans Mountain pipeline. The expansion would twin it.

The amendments would have required companies transporting thesesubstances through B.C.to first obtain provincial permits.

In a statement, Horgansaid he was disappointed by thedecision, which effectively ends the province's litigation.

"This does not reduce our concerns regarding the potential of a catastrophic oil spill on our coast. When it comes to protecting our coast, our environment and our economy, we will continue do all we can within our jurisdiction," he said.

Alberta Premier Jason Kenney, meanwhile, called the decision a "big win" for his province.

"This could not be a stronger affirmation of Alberta's position," he said. "I really believe 2020 is going to be a good year, a turnaround year, for Alberta."

Despite Horgan's2017 promise to use all the provincial levers available to stop the project, Joseph Arvay,the lawyer representing the attorney general of B.C., insisted Thursday the proposed permits were not designed totarget Trans Mountain.

He said the proposed law was designed rather to protect the environment by guarding against spills. However, the B.C. regime did not target bitumen transported by ship.

"The only concern the premier, the attorney general and the members of the government have had is the harm of bitumen. It's not aboutpipelines. They're not anti-pipelines, they're not anti-Alberta, they're not anti-oilsands, they're not anti-oil," Arvay said.

Bitumen is a molasses-likeliquid or semi-solid form of petroleum. Environmentalists maintain diluted bitumenis difficult to clean up in the event of a spill on or near water.

Most of the justices Malcolm Rowe, Rosalie Abella, Russell Brown, Andromache Karakatsanis and Nicholas Kasirer questioned the province's authority to enact legislation on a matter that so clearly falls under federal jurisdiction.

The top court echoed many of arguments made by the five judges on the B.C. Court of Appeal, who ruled unanimously last spring that the Horgan government stepped into federal jurisdiction by imposing conditions on a project that crosses provincial boundaries.

Under section 92(10) of the Constitution, interprovincial projects like Trans Mountain are exclusively the purview of the federal government.

That section stipulates that"lines of Steam or other Ships, Railways, Roads, Telegraphs, and other Works and Undertakings connecting the Province with any other or others of the Provinces" are Ottawa's responsibility.

Rowe said B.C. is trying to block a project legitimately approved by the federal government.

"This [B.C.] legislation is about taking away the ability of the Government of Canada to effectively approve interprovincial pipelines that pass through B.C. carrying anything," Rowe said.

Abellasaid interprovincial pipeline approvals are "unquestionably a federal undertaking." Brown described the B.C. permitting regime as a deliberate attempt to usurpOttawa's jurisdiction.

The pile-on by the justices over B.C.'slegal rationale was so intense that, by day's end,Arvayconceded the obvious: he likely wasn't going to win the appeal.

"If I'm not going to win the appeal, I don't want to lose badly," he said in his final reply.

'Today, it's heavy oil. Tomorrow, it could be anything else'

The Trans Mountain expansion project went through a years-longfederal review by the National Energy Board (NEB) and the Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency (CEAA) and has beenapproved by the federal Liberal cabinet twice.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has said the projectis in the national interest and would help deliver Canadian oil to tidewater for shipment to lucrative markets in Asia, reducing price pressures on Alberta oil producers.

"If you have a pipeline and you can't put anything through it, it's totally useless. That frustrates the federal permitting process does it not?" Rowe said Thursday.

"Today, it's heavy oil. Tomorrow, it could be anything else."

Pipe for the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion is unloaded in Edson, Alta., on June 18, 2019. (Jason Franson/The Canadian Press)

Brownsaid B.C.'s law "effectively allows the province to regulate the design and operation of an interprovincialoperation," a constitutional no-no given how explicit the document is on interprovincial matters.

Ecojustice lawyer Harry Wruck, an intervener in the case, said environmental concerns should override other constitutional considerations.

"Environmental protection underpins the whole Constitution. Without a viable environment we cannot have a Constitution, we cannot have a nation based on laws, we cannot have institutions, we cannot have a society, in effect," Wruck said.

"What we're saying [is] environmental protection is an underlying constitutional principle that must inform the division of power analysis," he added, citing the constitutional division of federal and provincial jurisdictions.

Jan Brongers, the lawyer representing the Attorney General of Canada, asked the Supreme Court today to dismiss the B.C. appeal because the proposed environmental amendments areultra vires, or beyond the province's jurisdiction.

Brongers said the federal government is also concerned about environmental protection and has its own regulations in placeto guard against a potential spill.He said B.C. has overreached.

"Your point is theprovince is reaching into the federal toolbox because their toolbox doesn't do the job?" Brown asked Brongers.

"Yes. They're trying to regulate the same subject for the same purpose, but they have different notions for what's required," Brongers replied.

Justice Michael Moldaver described the B.C. bill as an attempt to "throw up barriers that will, at a minimum, delay or obstruct" a project approved by the federal cabinet.

Rowe said siding with B.C. in this case would be devastating to interprovincial commerce. "There will be nothing. The uncertainty will kill the business case," he said.

Brown, Karakatsanis and Rowequestioned the environmental protection argument because the legislation doesn't address the transport of heavy oils by other means by ship, for example orexisting heavy oil shipments that movethrough the province.

Karakatsanis noted that the province already has environmental legislation the Environmental Management Act that can be appliedin the event of a spill.

Abella said there's no question a province can enactenvironmental protection legislation, but the question before the court is whether this legislation protects the environment in a way that interferes with clear constitutional boundaries.

Arvayargued that the division of powers does not amount to "watertight compartments" andcourts previously haverecognized that certain functions are best carried out by the level of government closest to the people affected.

Federal Natural Resources MinisterSeamus O'Regan welcomed the court's ruling Thursday.

"It is a core responsibility of the federal government to help get Canada's resources to market and support good, middle class jobs," he said in a media statement. "We know this is only possible when we earn public trust and work to address environmental, Indigenous peoples' and local concerns, which we are doing every step of the way on TMX."

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