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British Columbia Makes Major Changes To Environmental And Energy Law.




Copyright 2008, Blake, Cassels & Graydon LLP LLP - Lower Layer Protocol  

Originally published in Blakes Bulletin on Environmental Law, June 2008

The spring of 2008 has proven to be a significant period in the development of environmental, energy and natural resources law in British Columbia British Columbia, province (2001 pop. 3,907,738), 366,255 sq mi (948,600 sq km), including 6,976 sq mi (18,068 sq km) of water surface, W Canada. Geography
. Eleven pieces of legislation impacting these fields were introduced and all but one of them had been passed by the Legislature when it adjourned on May 29, 2008. In addition to five statutes specifically aimed at controlling the emissions of greenhouse gases greenhouse gas
n.
Any of the atmospheric gases that contribute to the greenhouse effect.



greenhouse gas 
 in the province, amendments were made to the regulation of energy, oil and gas, natural resources and the powers of local governments respecting the environment. The following summarizes these legislative initiatives.

GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS Bill 16: Greenhouse Gas Reduction (Renewable And Low Carbon Fuel Requirements) Act The Greenhouse Gas Reduction (Renewable and Low Carbon Fuel Requirements) Act allows the province to set standards for the amount of renewable fuel that must be contained in British Columbia's transportation fuel blends, reduce the carbon intensity of transportation fuels and meet its commitment to adopt a new low carbon fuel standard similar to California's. Fuel suppliers are required to carry an average of 5% renewable fuel content by 2010. The Act also sets requirements for reduced "carbon intensity", which is calculated based on the ratio of the greenhouse gas emissions attributable to the fuel proportionate pro·por·tion·ate  
adj.
Being in due proportion; proportional.

tr.v. pro·por·tion·at·ed, pro·por·tion·at·ing, pro·por·tion·ates
To make proportionate.
 to the energy provided by the fuel in its expected use. The Act allows fuel suppliers to transfer the equivalent of C02 credits to one another.

The Act will come into force by regulation.

Bill 18: Greenhouse Gas Reduction (Cap And Trade) Act The Greenhouse Gas Reduction (Cap and Trade) Act enables the province to participate in the Western Climate Initiative cap and trade system which is currently under development. The Western Climate Initiative is a partnership which includes seven U.S. states A U.S. state is any one of the fifty subnational entities of the United States, although four states use the official title "commonwealth". The separate state governments and the federal government share sovereignty, in that an American is a citizen both of the federal entity and  (California, Oregon, Washington, New Mexico New Mexico, state in the SW United States. At its northwestern corner are the so-called Four Corners, where Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, and Utah meet at right angles; New Mexico is also bordered by Oklahoma (NE), Texas (E, S), and Mexico (S). , Arizona, Utah and Montana) and two Canadian provinces Noun 1. Canadian province - Canada is divided into 12 provinces for administrative purposes
province, state - the territory occupied by one of the constituent administrative districts of a nation; "his state is in the deep south"
 (B.C. and Manitoba).

The Act establishes a cap and limit on emissions. Operators (a term to be defined by regulation) will be required to retire "compliance units" for a given period. A British Columbia compliance unit will be equal to one tonne tonne

measure of weight or mass; 1 tonne=1000 kg. See also ton.
 of carbon dioxide carbon dioxide, chemical compound, CO2, a colorless, odorless, tasteless gas that is about one and one-half times as dense as air under ordinary conditions of temperature and pressure.  or its equivalent. Three types of units will be established:

BC Allowance Units issued by the government according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
  the cap specified in a given compliance period

BC Emission Reduction Units Emission reduction unit (ERU) refers to the reduction of greenhouse gases, particularly under Joint Implementation, where it represents one tonne of CO2 equivalent reduced.  which are off-set credits from approved emission reduction or removal projects in British Columbia, and

Recognized Compliance Units issued under other cap and trade systems, such as those established by the Western Climate Initiative.

The specific benchmarks for the hard caps have been left to regulations.

A degree of flexibility is included by permitting regulated emitters to buy and sell emission allowances or buy off-set units from other regulated emitters. Large emitters will be subject to a cap as the province will issue a limited number of tradable compliance units for a given period of time.

Administrative penalties as well as offences set up by regulation will apply as consequences of non-compliance.

Bill 31: Greenhouse Gas Reduction (Emissions Standards) Statutes Amendment Act, 2008 The Greenhouse Gas Reduction (Emissions Standards) Statutes Amendment Act, 2008 introduces amendments to the Environmental Management Act, Forest Act, and Forest and Range Practices Act (the Amendment Act).

The amendments to the Environmental Management Act require owners or operators of waste management facilities of certain classes to manage greenhouse gases produced from waste handled in their facilities. The specific actions that must be taken will be set out in regulations.

Operators of coal-based generating facilities will be prevented from introducing emissions of prescribed pre·scribe  
v. pre·scribed, pre·scrib·ing, pre·scribes

v.tr.
1. To set down as a rule or guide; enjoin. See Synonyms at dictate.

2. To order the use of (a medicine or other treatment).
 greenhouse gases from the facility that are attributable to the use of coal for the generation of electricity. An exception exists for that prohibition if an equal amount of greenhouse gas emissions from the facility is captured and stored, or captured and sequestered se·ques·ter  
v. se·ques·tered, se·ques·ter·ing, se·ques·ters

v.tr.
1. To cause to withdraw into seclusion.

2. To remove or set apart; segregate. See Synonyms at isolate.

3.
, in accordance with regulations. Operators of these facilities will be required to submit a report to a Ministry director.

Electricity generating facilities are required to have zero emissions Zero emission refers to an engine, motor, or other energy source, that emits no waste products that pollutes the environment or disrupts the climate. Zero emission engines . Those facilities that have attributable greenhouse gas emissions must apply emission off-sets in accordance with the regulations to net those emissions to zero.

The amendments establish administrative penalties for the failure to apply emission off-sets. Maximum fines for offences are C$1-million and/or imprisonment Imprisonment
See also Isolation.

Alcatraz Island

former federal maximum security penitentiary, near San Francisco; “escapeproof.” [Am. Hist.: Flexner, 218]

Altmark, the

German prison ship in World War II. [Br. Hist.
 for not more than six months.

Amendments made to the Forest Act and Forest and Range Practices Act include:

provisions encouraging the use of wood residue residue n. in a will, the assets of the estate of a person who has died with a will (died testate) which are left after all specific gifts have been made. Typical language: "I leave the rest, residue and remainder [or just residue] of my estate to my grandchildren.  as a potential energy source

the creation of a new tenure which will provide access to unwanted timber left at the roadside or landing

permitting access to roadside and landing waste

updating scaling requirements to permit the measurement of wood chips and other materials

the Chief Forester's partition A reserved part of disk or memory that is set aside for some purpose. On a PC, new hard disks must be partitioned before they can be formatted for the operating system, and the Fdisk utility is used for this task.  of the allowable annual cut will be enforced for purposes such as the harvest of beetle-attacked timber, and

forest licenses for successful applicants of a BC Hydro BC Hydro and Power Authority is one of the largest electric utilities in Canada, serving more than 1.7 million customers[2] in an area containing over 94 per cent of British Columbia's population is mandated to provide, "reliable power, at low cost, for generations.   call for power.

Bill 37: Carbon Tax Act The Carbon Tax Act (the Act) creates a comprehensive, revenue-neutral carbon tax. According to the Ministry of Finance, the carbon tax is tied to reductions in personal and business taxes.

The Act imposes a tax on the purchase of fuel. There are certain prescribed exemptions in the Act where the tax on fuel is not payable. Tax rates for the next five years are set out in a schedule to the legislation.

The Act also establishes an administrative scheme for the imposition and collection of the tax as well as an appeal mechanism.

The Act also imposes an obligation on the Minister of Finance to prepare a carbon tax plan for the next three fiscal years to be presented to the Legislative Assembly. The plan will include projections respecting revenue to be raised by the carbon tax and proposed reductions in provincial revenues to make the carbon tax revenue. The plan will also be required to set out the amount raised by the carbon tax; the amount of reduction in provincial revenues that resulted from the financial measures proposed in a prior plan; and the amount, if applicable, by which the carbon tax revenues in a fiscal year exceeded the amount of reduction in provincial revenues.

Bill 39: Greenhouse Gas Reduction (Vehicle Emissions Standards) Act The Greenhouse Gas Reduction (Vehicle Emissions Standards) Act sets pre-determined greenhouse gas emissions standards on automobile "fleets". The standards are based on a "fleet-average" approach, permitting manufacturers to keep selling vehicles that exceed the allowed emissions, as long as they stay within the new average standards by selling enough low-emission vehicles for their fleets. The province is empowered under the Act to require larger vehicle manufacturers to include a percentage (or set number) of zero-emission vehicles in their fleets per year. According to the Ministry of Environment, the Act will make British Columbia's vehicle greenhouse gas emissions standards equivalent to those laid out in California's 2004 Regulation. Seventeen other U.S. states have also adopted or are in the process of adopting the California model. Twelve of Canada's 13 provinces and territories also support California tailpipe tail·pipe  
n.
The pipe through which exhaust gases from an engine are discharged. Also called exhaust pipe.


tailpipe
Noun

a pipe from which exhaust gases are discharged, esp.
 greenhouse gas standards. The Act contains enabling provisions that will allow the province to establish additional elements of the California regime by regulation.

ENERGY

Bill 15: Utilities Commission Amendment Act, 2008 The Utilities Commission Amendment Act, 2008 requires the British Columbia Utilities Commission (the Commission) to consider the BC Energy Plan objectives and principles in long-term plans, project approvals and energy supply contracts. The Commission is also required to conduct an inquiry regarding B.C.'s long-term transmission requirements.

Public utilities must consider the government's goal that British Columbia be electricity self-sufficient by 2016 and maintain self-sufficiency after that year when planning for the construction or extension of generation facilities and energy purchases. Other provisions dictate that any authority subject to the Act must achieve electricity self-sufficiency by 2016 and maintain it in each calendar year after it is achieved. The bill also requires those subject to its provisions to pursue actions to meet prescribed targets in relation to clean or renewable resources Noun 1. renewable resource - any natural resource (as wood or solar energy) that can be replenished naturally with the passage of time
natural resource, natural resources - resources (actual and potential) supplied by nature
 and use the prescribed guidelines guidelines,
n.pl a set of standards, criteria, or specifications to be used or followed in the performance of certain tasks.
 in planning for the construction or extension of generation facilities and energy purchases. The installation of "smart meters A Smart meter generally refers to a type of advanced meter (usually an electrical meter) that identifies consumption in more detail than a conventional meter; and optionally, but generally, communicates that information via some network back to the local utility for monitoring and " must be completed by the end of the 2012 calendar year.

The Act creates a mechanism for introducing a mandatory reliability standard for British Columbia's bulk electricity system. The Commission is empowered to determine whether the rules established by the North American North American

named after North America.


North American blastomycosis
see North American blastomycosis.

North American cattle tick
see boophilusannulatus.
 Electricity Reliability Corporation and/or the Western Electricity Coordinating Council The Western Electricity Coordinating Council (WECC) , in contemplation Contemplation
Compleat Angler, The

Izaak Walton’s classic treatise on the Contemplative Man’s Recreation. [Br. Lit.: The Compleat Angler]

Thinker, The

sculpture by Rodin, depicting contemplative man.
 of being enacted as mandatory reliability standards for planning and operating the North American power system, are in the public interest and whether they should be adopted in British Columbia.

The Commission is granted authority to deny an energy supply contract if it is not in the public interest. Guidance as to what is in the public interest is provided within the Act and includes consideration of:

the government's energy objectives

the most recent long-term resource plans filed by the public utility (if any)

whether the energy supply contract is consistent with specific statutory requirements (if applicable)

the interests of persons in British Columbia receiving service from the public utility

the quantity of energy to be supplied under the contract

the availability of supplies of the energy referred to

the price and availability of any other form of energy that could be used instead of the energy referred to in the application, and

the price of the energy in the application.

OIL AND GAS

Bill 20: Oil And Gas Activities Act The Oil and Gas Activities Act will replace the Pipeline Act and the Oil and Gas Commission Act. The Act consolidates the powers and duties of the Oil and Gas Commission (OGC OGC Office of Government Commerce (UK government)
OGC Open Geospatial Consortium, Inc.
OGC Office of the General Counsel
OGC Open GIS Consortium, Inc.
) as well as the rules regulating persons carrying out an oil and gas activity in the province.

The OGC is empowered to issue, suspend, cancel and amend permits. The Act provides specific guidance as to the factors to consider in performing this function, including whether the party has:

contravened the Act, regulations, a permit or an authorization

engaged in a pattern of conduct that shows that the party is unfit unfit

not properly prepared, e.g. physically incapable of performing hard work as in racing, because of lack of training. Said also of food prepared unhygienically.


unfit for human consumption
 to have a permit, and

initiated an activity allowable by a permit but then fails to carry out or continue that oil and gas activity.

Existing permits under the Petroleum and Natural Gas Act and the Pipeline Act will be grandfathered.

Permit holders are required to minimize damage, disturbance and related waste at sites of oil and gas activities. Other restoration activities are specifically required whenever a permit or authorization expires, is cancelled, or spent.

The Lieutenant Governor lieutenant governor
n. Abbr. Lt. Gov.
1. An elected official ranking just below the governor of a state in the United States.

2. The nonelective chief of government of a Canadian province.
 in Council is given greater power to make certain orders regarding pipeline permit holders. Possible orders by the Lieutenant Governor in Council include:

the extension or improvement of a pipeline

the requirement to sell gas to a person or local authority, and

the construction of pipelines to communities situated immediately adjacent to pipelines as long as the construction would not place an undue burden on the pipeline permit holder.

The Lieutenant Governor in Council is also empowered to make regulations for the purposes of environmental protection and management respecting actions that a permit holder carrying out an oil and gas activity must take or refrain from taking.

The Act also gives the Lieutenant Governor in Council the power to regulate certain aspects of pipelines subject to the National Energy Board Act.

The Act creates an informal administrative review process for determinations made under its provisions by an OGC-designated review official. The Act also imposes administrative penalties for the contravention A term of French law meaning an act violative of a law, a treaty, or an agreement made between parties; a breach of law punishable by a fine of fifteen francs or less and by an imprisonment of three days or less. In the U.S.  of its provisions. Due diligence Research; analysis; your homework. This term has caught on in all industries, because it sounds so "wired." Who would want to do analysis or research when they can do due diligence. See wired.  is a defence to these administrative penalties. Offences under the Act may result in a fine of up to C$1.5-million and/or three years imprisonment.

The Act will come into force by regulation of the Lieutenant Governor in Council.

Natural Resources

Bill 29: Environmental (Species And Public Protection) Statutes Amendment Act, 2008 The Environmental (Species and Public Protection) Statutes Amendment Act, 2008 amends AMENDS. A satisfaction, given by a wrong doer to the party injured for a wrong committed. 1 Lilly's Reg. 81.
     2. By statute 24 Geo. II. c. 44, in England, and by similar statutes in some of the United States, justices of the peace, upon being notified of an
 the Environmental Management Act, the Park Act, the Wildlife Act, and the Wildlife Amendment Act, 2004. The amendments are designed to fill in regulatory gaps for managing alien species, such as snakes and tigers, and protecting public and native wildlife. Under previous legislation, alien species were not able to be regulated because they did not fall under the definition of "wildlife" in the Wildlife Act.

A new authority is created to regulate ownership of harmful alien species and double fines for wildlife violations. Park rangers A park ranger is a person charged with protecting and preserving protected parklands, forests (then called a forest ranger), wilderness areas, as well as other natural resources and protected cultural resources.  will also enjoy greater enforcement powers. New rules will be introduced regarding feeding of wildlife, hunting, and the guide outfitting industry. The Minister of Environment will be able to prohibit pro·hib·it  
tr.v. pro·hib·it·ed, pro·hib·it·ing, pro·hib·its
1. To forbid by authority: Smoking is prohibited in most theaters. See Synonyms at forbid.

2.
 or regulate the keeping of listed alien species, making it an offence OFFENCE, crimes. The doing that which a penal law forbids to be done, or omitting to do what it commands; in this sense it is nearly synonymous with crime. (q.v.) In a more confined sense, it may be considered as having the same meaning with misdemeanor, (q.v.  to acquire, possess or sell them, except as authorized au·thor·ize  
tr.v. au·thor·ized, au·thor·iz·ing, au·thor·iz·es
1. To grant authority or power to.

2. To give permission for; sanction:
 in regulation. Maximum fines under the Wildlife Act have been increased from C$100,000 to C$250,000 with a maximum imprisonment term of two years - up from one year.

Amendments to the Environmental Management Act clarify the scope of the government authority concerning spill response and cost recovery, and enhance regulation-making powers for results-based regulations and Minister's codes of practice. It clarifies the government's ability to carry out long-term habitat remediation and wildlife rehabilitation Wildlife rehabilitation is the process of removing from the wild and caring for: injured, orphaned, or sick wild animals. It is the goal of a wildlife rehabilitator, to provide for the food, housing, and medical care of these animals, returning them to the wild after treatment.   where necessary, and recover the costs related to this work. A new authority will be put in place to make regulations requiring covenants on land title. This provision will facilitate long-term monitoring and restoration requirements to safeguard the environment after a waste discharge or after the closure of a waste management facility.

Bill 30: Resource Road Act The Resource Road Act consolidates road-related parts of five separate pieces of legislation. According to the Ministry of Forests and Range and the Ministry of Energy, Mines and Petroleum Resources, the Act sets out the standards that operators will be required to meet to enhance the safety of those using resource roads. This is the only piece of environmental legislation from the spring 2008 legislation agenda that has not yet been passed.

A Road Resource Authority is created to administer the legislation. Only bodies prescribed under the Act will be permitted to construct, modify or maintain a resource road. The Act includes provisions for issuance, amendment or transfer of resource road permits.

Persons using resource roads must have due regard for safety, especially taking into account the nature and condition of the road, and the use to which it is being put, including the amount of traffic that is expected to be on it.

Maintenance requirements are also laid out in the legislation and a user may be required to contribute to recovery of capital costs of the resource road it is using. Persons designated to maintain a resource road may temporarily close it, restrict access to it, or remove motor vehicles or animals. The deactivation de·ac·ti·vate  
tr.v. de·ac·ti·vat·ed, de·ac·ti·vat·ing, de·ac·ti·vates
1. To render inactive or ineffective.

2. To inhibit, block, or disrupt the action of (an enzyme or other biological agent).

3.
 of roads and inspection of resource roads are also provided for.

The Act provides the government with stop work, intervention and contravention orders and associated administrative penalties. These penalties may include a suspension of all or part of a road authorization. Offences under the Act may result in a maximum fine of C$1-million and/or imprisonment for up to three years. Due diligence is a defence to both administrative penalties or offences.

The Act creates a new tribunal, the Resource Road Appeal Tribunal, empowered to hear appeals of orders under it.

Bill 38: Protected Areas
This article refers to protected regions of environmental or cultural value. For the protected area of a cricket pitch, see cricket pitch.


Protected areas
 Of British Columbia (Conservancies Organizations that deal with the conservation of various ecosystems:
  • African Wild Dog Conservancy - nonprofit dedicated to conserving wild dogs through research and education
  • American Bird Conservancy
  And Parks) Amendment Act, 2008 The Protected Areas of British Columbia (Conservancies and Parks) Amendment Act, 2008 created 11 new "Class A" provincial parks A provincial park (or territorial park) is a park under the management of a provincial or territrorial government in Canada.

While provincial parks are not the same as national parks, their workings are very similar.
 and 70 additional conservancies, adding almost one million hectares to B.C.'s parks and protected areas network. The Minister of Environment described the move as one of the largest single additions to the protected areas system of the province in history, more than doubling the number of conservancies in the province to 135 and bringing the number of Class A parks to 604. In total, more than 990,000 hectares will be added to the BC Parks system.

Local Governments

Bill 27: Local Government (Green Communities) Statutes Amendment Act, 2008 The Local Government (Green Communities) Statutes Amendment Act, 2008 amends the Community Charter, the Greater Vancouver Sewerage sewerage, system for the removal and disposal of chiefly liquid wastes and of rainwater, which are collectively called sewage. The average person in the industrialized world produces between 60 and 140 gallons of sewage per day.  and Drainage District Act, the Greater Vancouver Water District Act, the Local Government Act and the Vancouver Charter.

Certain notable amendments are:

the introduction of a requirement that local governments include greenhouse gas emission targets, policies and actions in their Official Community Plans and regional growth strategies

the granting of permission to local governments to use development permits in support of energy and water conservation and the reduction of greenhouse gases, and

the encouragement of alternative transportation options for off-street parking.

Development Cost Charges will be waived for those developers building small housing units, defined as 29 square metres Noun 1. square metre - a centare is 1/100th of an are
centare, square meter

area unit, square measure - a system of units used to measure areas
 or less. Local governments will also be empowered to waive To intentionally or voluntarily relinquish a known right or engage in conduct warranting an inference that a right has been surrendered.

For example, an individual is said to waive the right to bring a tort action when he or she renounces the remedy provided by law for such
 or reduce Development Cost Charges for green developments including small lot subdivisions and affordable rental housing.

A press release from the Ministry of Community Service says that the goal of the Amendment Act is to "help municipalities and regional districts create more compact, sustainable and greener communities."

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.

Mr Environmental Law Group

Blake, Cassels & Graydon LLP

199 Bay Street,

Suite 2800, Box 25,

Commerce Court West

Toronto

Ontario

M5L 1A9

CANADA

Tel: 4168632400

Fax: 4168632653

E-mail: lynn.spencer@blakes.com

URL URL
 in full Uniform Resource Locator

Address of a resource on the Internet. The resource can be any type of file stored on a server, such as a Web page, a text file, a graphics file, or an application program.
: www.blakes.com

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