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Alberta Court of Appeal Releases Reference Opinion on Constitutionality of the Federal Impact Assessment Act

May 11, 2022

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Written By Brad Gilmour, Bruce Mellett and Sean Assie

The Province of Alberta referred two constitutional questions to the Alberta Court of Appeal:

  1. whether the federal Impact Assessment Act (IAA), part of Bill C-69, is unconstitutional in whole; and
  2. whether certain regulations made under the IAA are unconstitutional in whole or in part.

The case was argued before the Alberta Court of Appeal in February of 2021.The Court released its opinion on May 10.

Opinion of the Court

By a four to one majority, the Alberta Court of Appeal is of the opinion that the IAA and its Regulations are unconstitutional. The opinion can be found on the Court of Appeal Alberta website.

In arriving at its opinion that the IAA and its Regulations are outside the jurisdiction of Parliament, the Majority concluded that:

The majority also expressed its concern over the IAA's duplication of existing provincial assessment regimes and for the impact on investor confidence. It further observed that there is no general federal jurisdiction over GHG emissions or projects and activities that may create them.

The opinion declined to attempt to sever the offending provisions and thus concluded that the IAA and Regulations are ultra vires.

In a dissenting opinion, Justice Greckol concluded that the IAA was a constitutional exercise of federal jurisdiction to facilitate planning and information gathering in decision-making, as well as to regulate activities' effects on matters within its jurisdiction in cooperation with the provinces and First Nations.

Bennett Jones LLP was counsel for Alberta on the Reference, with Bruce MellettBrad Gilmour and Sean Assie appearing for the Province.

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