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ONTARIO ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT LAW NOVEMBER 11, 2013. Overview: Environmental Assessment Act (Ontario) . Application of EAA Preparation of Terms of Reference and Environmental Assessment EA Hearing Process Class Environmental Assessments Ontario Hydro DSM EA)
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Overview: Environmental Assessment Act (Ontario) • Application of EAA • Preparation of Terms of Reference and Environmental Assessment • EA Hearing Process • Class Environmental Assessments • Ontario Hydro DSM EA) • Public participation (Intervenor Act)
Application of Environmental Assessment Act (Ontario) • Enacted in 1975, substantially amended in 1996 • Aka “Environmental Exemptions Act” • Purpose: “the betterment” of the people of Ontario by providing for the “protection, conservation and wise management” of the environment s. 2
Application of Environmental Assessment Act (Ontario) • Requires proponents to • Consider range of reasonable alternatives • Assess environmental effects of alternatives • Demonstrate that preferred alternative is environmentally superior and necessary • Minister of Environment has overall authority (EA and Approvals Branch) • Broad definition of “environment” (biophysical, socio-economic, cultural and their interrelationships) s.1.(1)
Application of Environmental Assessment Act (Ontario) • Distinguishes between public and private sector proponents • Applies to public sector undertakings unless exempt by order/regulation s.3.(c) • Doesn’t apply to private sector undertakings unless designated by regulation, voluntarily included s. 3.0.1 • Minister authorized to dispense with statutory requirements to harmonize with other jurisdiction s. 3.(1)
General Regulatory Exemptions • Renewable energy projects • Municipal undertakings less than $3.5 million • Drainage works • Some waste disposal sites (pilot projects, mobile PCB destruction facilities) • Subdivision agreements • Undertakings by conservation authorities • Financial assistance programs • Research undertakings
Other Regulatory Exemptions • Project-specific Exemptions • Other municipal and provincial undertakings • Long-term Electricity Supply Plan • Sectoral Exemptions • Electricity Projects Regulation • Waste Management Projects Regulation • Transportation Authority Undertakings Regulation
Class Environmental Assessments • 11 categories of Class EAs (municipal roads, forest management activities, commuter rail stations) • Represent 90% of undertakings subject to EAA • Provides for pre-approval of undertaking, self-regulation • Authority to “bump up” Class EA undertaking to individual EA rarely exercised
Process for Individual Environmental Assessments • Intended for “large-scale, complex undertakings with the potential for significant environmental effects and major public interest” (Ministry of Environment website)
Process for Individual Environmental Assessments • Proponent submits terms of reference for public consultation, Ministerial approval • Proponent submits environmental assessment • Ministry coordinates public, Aboriginal, community, government comments • Ministry prepares Ministry review • Public inspection of Ministry Review • Minister’s decision (or referral for hearings) • Proponent implements projects and monitors for compliance
Public Hearings • EAA empowers Minister to refer an application to Environmental Review Tribunal for public hearing/decision • Public hearings held for high-profile undertakings: landfills, incinerators, highways, timber management, provincial energy demand-supply plan • Only 2 hearings since 1996
Ontario Energy Demand-Supply Hearings • Ontario Hydro 25-year Demand /Supply Plan (DSP) Report released in 1989 • DSP projected a supply/demand gap opening up in mid-1990s, reaching 9,700 MW by 2005 • DSP proposed several additional nuclear, coal-fired generation plants
Ontario Energy Demand-Supply Hearings • DSP referred to EAA hearings by Environmental Assessment Board • Persuasive evidence at hearings that energy demand growth overestimated (total demand in 2009 same as 1989) • DSP revised in 1992 then abandoned • Hearings lasted several years—longest in Ontario history
Ontario Energy Demand-Supply Hearings • No additional generating facilities built saving Ontario taxpayers billions • Yet DSP hearings considered a failure due to their length and cost
Ottawa River Bridge and Highway Corridor Project • National Capital Commission proposed new bridge across Ottawa River, 6-lane highway corridor linking Highway 417 in Ottawa and Autoroute 50 in Gatineau • Estimated cost (2008) of $500-600m • Corridor options: • Kettle Island (8.5 km) • Lower Duck Island (12 km) • Gatineau Airport/McLaurin Bay (12 km)
Ottawa River Bridge and Highway Corridor Project • Stated purpose to divert some heavy truck traffic from King Edward corridor • No transportation study completed to assess level of diversion • Second purpose to provide more access to Ottawa for Gatineau auto commuters
Ottawa River Bridge and Highway Corridor Project • Environmental threats worse for Kettle Island due to higher population density in quiet, well-established neighbourhood • Truck noise and pollution • Increase in automobile traffic in Ottawa from Gatineau • Increased burning of fossil fuels, increased greenhouse gas and other air emissions • Urban sprawl in Gatineau
Ottawa River Bridge and Highway Corridor Project • NCC commenced screening under CEAA, which was terminated when CEAA 2012 came into force • CEAA 2012 would not apply • NCC planned to conduct ad hoc EA • EA hearings required in Quebec by Bureau d’audiencespubliquessurl’environnement (BAPE)
Ottawa River Bridge and Highway Corridor Project • Ontario: EAA didn’t apply although declaration for non-application procedure not been employed • Agreed that all three options for bridge and highway corridor undertakings under EAA, no regulatory exemption • EAA would not apply as Ontario is not a "proponent" but only "partner“ • “Undertaking” not “proponent” triggers EAA
Ottawa River Bridge and Highway Corridor Project • Possible application for judicial review against Ontario? • Judicial confirmation needed that Ontario must apply EAA to undertakings proposed by public sector proponents unless exempted • Moot because City of Ottawa and Ontario abandoned project in 2013 on account of expense
Why the rush to evade Ontario Environmental Assessment? • Costs of EA? • Does carrying out analysis of alternatives make EA work in Ontario more onerous than CEAA 2012 EAs or those of other provinces? • Other statutory schemes such as Planning Act duplicate EAs? • Other provinces rushing for the EA exits as well
Why the rush to evade Ontario Environmental Assessment? • What about wind projects in Ontario? • Fracking in Quebec and New Brunswick? • Offshore oil and gas development? • Is growing civil unrest due to weak EA regimes? Lack of public participation in decision-making?