Tuesday, July 27th, 2010
Written by: Nigel Bankes
PDF version: Mutatis Mutandis: The ERCB speaks (in Latin) on the subject of carbon capture and storage
Considered: ERCB Bulletin 2010 - 22, ERCB Processes Related to Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) Projects, June 29, 2010
After a long period of cogitation the chief energy regulator in the province has finally provided a statement of how it proposes to approach the regulation of carbon capture and storage (CCS) projects. The message is simple: apply the current rules, so far as they are applicable to CCS (the basic idea of mutatis mutandis). The issue is important: several task forces and many commentators have emphasised that the proponents of CCS projects need regulatory certainty if they are to plan and implement commercial scale CCS operations. Whether this ERCB Bulletin provides sufficient guidance to industry and sufficient comfort to the citizens of the province that CCS projects will be handled safely remains to be seen.
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Posted in Administrative Law, Carbon Capture and Storage, Climate Change, Property
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Monday, July 26th, 2010
Written by: Nigel Bankes
PDF version: Estoppel arguments fail once again in an oil and gas lease case
Case considered: Desoto Resources Limited v. Encana Corporation, 2010 ABQB 448
In this case Justice William Tilleman dismissed an appeal from Master Jodi Mason’s decision in chambers in which she had granted summary judgement in favour of the defendant in the action, Encana. Desoto had been seeking a declaration that it had a number of valid leases notwithstanding that the primary term of the leases had expired in the 1970s and that there had been no production on the leases for a period beginning in the late 1990s. This was apparently, at least at the outset, as a result of the properties being shut-in by order of the Energy Resources Conservation Board because of the failure of the then lessee to pay well abandonment deposits.
I blogged on Master Mason’s decision - see Successful application for summary dismissal in an oil and gas lease validity case.
On appeal, Desoto focused on estoppel arguments urging that the leases should survive on the basis of promissory estoppel, estoppel by acquiescence, or estoppel by deed.
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Posted in Civil Procedure and Evidence, Natural Resources, Oil & Gas, Property
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Thursday, July 22nd, 2010
Written by: Maureen Duffy
PDF version: The Third Time Is the Charm? The Ongoing Litigation Regarding Omar Khadr
Case considered: Khadr v. Canada (Prime Minister), 2010 FC 715.
Omar Khadr, perhaps the most controversial of the detainees at the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, has won another round, in the Federal Court of Canada, in his ongoing quest to pressure the Government to seek to repatriate him to Canada. The Honourable Mr. Justice Zinn cited the “unique circumstances of this case” and entered a strongly worded judgment, finding that Khadr was entitled to “procedural fairness and natural justice” by the executive in the response to the most recent Supreme Court of Canada ruling in the case - Canada (Prime Minister) v. Khadr, 2010 SCC 3 [Khadr II].
Justice Zinn, finding the Government’s response to date to be lacking, laid out a number of specific mandates for the Government. He ordered the Government to advise Khadr and his attorneys, within seven days, of all “untried” remedies, which had the potential to cure or at least lessen the prior breach of Khadr’s Charter rights. He granted Khadr time to respond with his own list of potential remedies, and even went so far as to retain jurisdiction to resolve disputes and to impose his own remedies if the Government failed to do so in a reasonable time. Not surprisingly, the Government appealed Justice Zinn’s ruling, setting the stage for a possible third round of higher court rulings in this case.
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Posted in Constitutional, Remedies, Supreme Court of Canada, Uncategorized
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Friday, July 16th, 2010
Written by: Nickie Vlavianos
PDF version: Still More Questions about Standing before the ERCB
Case Considered: Prince v. Alberta (Energy Resources Conservation Board), 2010 ABCA 214
Leave to appeal applications from standing decisions of the Energy Resources Conservation Board (ERCB) continue to be heard almost, it seems, regularly. Some cases raise questions about the first part of the standing test, whether a “right” has been established that may be affected by a proposed energy project. Others focus on the second part of the test, whether possible direct and adverse effects have been demonstrated. Sometimes the Court of Appeal grants leave; sometimes it does not. Prince v. Alberta (ERCB) is another case of leave denied. It is also yet another case that raises important questions about the proper interpretation of the test for standing. Isn’t it time for legislative direction?
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Posted in Aboriginal, Intervenors and Standing, Natural Resources
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Thursday, July 8th, 2010
Written by: David Laidlaw and Monique Passelac-Ross
PDF version: Water Rights and Water Stewardship: What About Aboriginal Peoples?
Introduction
The province of Alberta is currently reviewing its approach to the allocation, licensing and transfer of water rights. The government has received advice from a number of groups of experts established under various government initiatives and concerned citizens have come forward with their own recommendations. In addition, the government has announced that it will hold public consultations on the proposed review of its water allocation and management system in the summer of 2010.
One striking feature of the reports received by the Alberta government is the absence of attention paid to the issue of Aboriginal uses of, and rights to, water. First Nations are only mentioned, along with other designated groups, in passing in a single recommendation (at #12 of the 15 recommendations) in the report submitted by the Minister’s Advisory Group dealing with governance of water management and allocation: Minister’s Advisory Group, Recommendations for Improving Alberta’s Water Management and Allocation, August 2009.
One reason for this lack of attention is Alberta’s long-standing position that Aboriginal water rights have been extinguished and the province has exclusive jurisdiction over water in the province (see Nigel Bankes, “Water Law Reform in Alberta: Paying Obeisance to the ‘Lords of Yesterday’, or Creating a Water Charter for the Future?” (1995) 49 Resources 1 at 5).
Alberta’s position has been challenged by several First Nations in several lawsuits alleging that their water rights still exist, both on and off reserve, and those rights now receive the benefit of constitutional protection. In connection with these rights Aboriginal peoples assert that they must be adequately consulted by the government on proposed reviews of the water allocation system and on ongoing land and water initiatives that impact their rights. In response, the government has stated that it will seek input from First Nations on water use and watershed planning initiatives through an undefined separate “yet parallel process”: Government of Alberta, Water for Life: Alberta’s Water Allocation Management System Review; see “Who is involved in the Water Allocation System Review?”
In November 2009, the Canadian Institute of Resources Law (CIRL) convened a small workshop, funded by the Alberta Law Foundation and the Canadian Boreal Initiative, to discuss the issue of Aboriginal rights to water in Alberta. The meeting was attended by First Nations elders and councillors, community leaders, lawyers and scholars. This article draws in part from the proceedings of this workshop and a CIRL Occasional Paper #29, Defining Aboriginal Rights to Water in Alberta: Do They Still “Exist”? How Extensive are They? by Monique M. Passelac-Ross and Christina M. Smith (2010).
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Posted in Aboriginal, Water Law
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Friday, July 2nd, 2010
Written by: Jonnette Watson Hamilton
PDF version: Pre-emptive attack on arbitration succeeds
Case considered: Suncor Energy Products Inc. v. Howe-Baker Engineers, Ltd., 2010 ABQB 310
Instead of asserting an ordinary limitation period defence in the ordinary course of an arbitration proceeding, Suncor chose to attempt a pre-emptive attack in the Court of Queen’s Bench, asking the court to assume jurisdiction and strike the arbitration proceedings that were barely underway. The court did so, rather than dismissing Suncor’s application or requiring Suncor to respond to the request for arbitration so that the parties’ arbitrator could decide the limitation period issue. It is this aspect of the judgment -the “who decides?” aspect - that I will focus on in this comment. The court’s decision appears to undermine the legitimacy of domestic arbitration.
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Posted in Arbitration
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Wednesday, June 30th, 2010
Written by: Shaun Fluker
PDF version: The Case of the 1600 dead ducks: The verdict is in - Syncrude guilty under the Migratory Birds Convention Act
Case considered: R. v. Syncrude Canada Ltd., 2010 ABPC 229
On June 25, 2010 Justice Ken Tjosvold of the Provincial Court of Alberta issued his guilty verdict against Syncrude Canada after a lengthy trial heard over approximately 8 weeks during this past March and April. The message is a powerful one: Syncrude is held to account by the criminal justice system for the death of 1600 migratory birds that landed in one of its tailings ponds.
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Posted in Environmental
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Tuesday, June 29th, 2010
Written by: Linda McKay-Panos
PDF version: What’s in a name? Construction Owners Association of Alberta and Construction Labour Relations – An Alberta Association Concerned about “Employer” in the Alberta Human Rights Act
Case considered: Lockerbie & Hole Industrial Inc. v. Alberta (Human Rights and Citizenship Commission), 2010 ABCA 184
It is fairly rare that two agencies not parties to an action would seek leave to intervene in a human rights appeal. I am not terribly surprised that the Alberta Human Rights Commission (formerly the Alberta Human Rights and Citizenship Commission) has appealed the 2009 Court of Queen’s Bench decision in Lockerbie & Hole Industrial Inc. v. Alberta (Human Rights and Citizenship Commission), 2009 ABQB 241. As I noted in my previous post on this case, the decision of Justice T.D. Clackson involving the interpretation of who is considered an “employer” under s. 7(1) of the Alberta Human Rights, Citizenship and Multiculturalism Act, R.S.A. 2000, c. H-14 (now Alberta Human Rights Act, R.S.A. 2000, c. A-25.5) appeared to be contrary to both existing case law and the spirit of “large and liberal” interpretation normally given to human rights legislation. Apparently, there are Albertan companies and associations who share an interest in the outcome of the appeal.
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Posted in Human Rights
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Friday, June 25th, 2010
Written by: Arlene Kwasniak
PDF version: Innovative but controversial municipal bylaws survive challenges
Case considered: Keller v. Municipal District of Bighorn No. 8, 2010 ABQB 362
This case is significant in three regards. First it raises the thorny issue of standard of review regarding the reasonableness of a municipal bylaw under the Municipal Government Act (R.S.A. 2000, c. M-26) (MGA), given that the SCC in Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 190 (Dunsmuir) collapsed the previous standard of review categories of patent unreasonableness and reasonableness into one category, reasonableness, and section 539 of the MGA that states that no municipal bylaw (or resolution) may be challenged on the ground that it is unreasonable. Second, it considers the validity of an innovative municipal land use management tool that is not specifically authorized by the MGA, thus shedding light on the breadth of municipal authority in carrying out its land use and development functions. Third, it is the first decision to consider the effect of the Alberta Land Stewardship Act, S.A. 2009, c. A-26.8 (ALSA). The case considers who may bring a challenge regarding alleged non-compliance with the ALSA, and whether the ALSA is retroactive.
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Posted in Administrative Law, Municipal Law
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Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010
Written by: Linda McKay-Panos
PDF version: Supreme Court of Canada Upholds Constitutionality of Publication Bans in Bail Hearings, Media Outlets Unhappy
Case Considered: Toronto Star Newspapers Ltd. v. Canada, 2010 SCC 21, an appeal from the Courts of Appeal of Ontario (Toronto Star Newspapers Ltd. v. Canada, 2009 ONCA 59) and Alberta (R. v. White, 2008 ABCA 294).
The Supreme Court of Canada recently dealt with appeals from Ontario (Toronto Star Newspapers Ltd. v. Canada) and Alberta (R. v. White) wherein several media outlets challenged the constitutionality of s. 517 of the Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c.C-46, which sets out when judges must impose a mandatory publication ban for evidence heard in bail proceedings. In the White case, the Alberta Court of Appeal had determined that while Criminal Code s. 517 violates freedom of expression under Charter s. 2(b), it can nevertheless be saved by Charter s. 1 as reasonable and justifiable in a free and democratic society (see my previous post on White).
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Posted in Constitutional, Supreme Court of Canada
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