Canada
Jul 8th, 2012 |
By Paul Manning
After a marathon session in the lower chamber of Canada’s federal parliament, the Conservative government majority prevailed and its federal Budget Bill C-38 (Jobs, Growth and Long-Term Prosperity Act) became law at the end of June 2012. Bill C-38 brings with it considerable restructuring of Canadian environmental regulation. The federal government says that the objective of
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Posted in Canada |
2 comments
Tags: Bill C-38, Canada, Canadian Environmental Assessment Act, Canadian Environmental Protection Act, Fisheries Act, National Energy Board Act, Paul Manning, Species at Risk Act
Mar 11th, 2012 |
By Paul Manning
Ontario’s ambitious renewable energy program is under attack from all sides. In December 2011, the Auditor General criticized the province’s Feed-in Tariff (FIT) rates for renewable energy as being too costly (see the Manning Environmental Law blog post December 5, 2011) . In February of this year, the report of the Commission on the Reform
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Posted in Canada |
2 comments
Tags: Canada, Feed-in Tariff program, Ontario, Paul Manning, solar power, wind power
Feb 4th, 2012 |
By EHS Journal
According to an audit report released by the Office of the Auditor General of Canada in December 2011, Transport Canada has not designed and implemented the management practices needed to effectively monitor regulatory compliance with the Transportation of Dangerous Goods Act, 1992. Key audit findings included …
Posted in Canada |
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Tags: Canada, compliance, emergency planning, National Energy Board, Transport Canada, transport of dangerous goods, transportation safety
Dec 15th, 2011 |
By Paul Manning
In a last-minute deal reached on December 11, 2011 at the 17th session of the Conference of the Parties (COP 17) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) meeting in Durban, South Africa, governments decided to adopt a universal legal agreement on climate change as soon as possible, but not later than
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Posted in Canada |
6 comments
Tags: Climate Change, COP 17, Durban, UNFCCC, United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
Nov 19th, 2011 |
By Michael Bittner
Canadian law firm Blake, Cassels & Graydon LLP has issued Blakes Guide to Environmental Law in Canada, an introductory summary of the principal laws and regulations of Canadian environmental law. The guide also provides an overview of environmental law in Ontario, Quebec, Alberta, and British Columbia. Chapters include Canadian Environmental Protection Act, 1999 (CEPA) Canadian
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Posted in Canada |
1 Comment »
Tags: Canada, Canada Consumer Product Safety Act, Canadian Environmental Assessment Act, Canadian Environmental Protection Act, enforcement, environmental law, Hazardous Products Act, Transportation of Dangerous Goods Act
Nov 1st, 2011 |
By Robert Fishlock
On October 24, 2011, Environment Canada (EC) released the first independent review of a decision to declare a chemical substance toxic and add it to the List of Toxic Substances maintained pursuant to the Canadian Environmental Protection Act (CEPA). Once added to that list, the government is required to develop risk management tools for the
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Posted in Canada |
2 comments
Tags: Canadian Environmental Protection Act, CEPA, Challenge Program, Environment Canada, Health Canada, Siloxane D4, siloxane D5, toxic substances, toxic substances ban
Sep 18th, 2011 |
By Michael Bittner
From Environment Canada. Canada’s Environment Minister Peter Kent announced in August that the Canadian government is moving forward with regulations for the coal-fired electricity sector. “Our strategy to lower our emissions is based on making improvements sector by sector to sustain our economy and protect our environment,” said Minister Kent. “We are taking action in the
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Posted in Canada |
No Comments »
Tags: air emissions, Canada, coal-fired electricity, electricity sector, Environment Canada, GHG, greenhouse gas emissions, regulations
May 15th, 2011 |
By Paul Manning
The surprising thing about Canada’s May 2, 2011 federal election is not so much that the Canadian electorate returned a majority at last for Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s minority Conservative government but that it deserted the Liberal Party in droves to catapult the National Democratic Party (NDP) into second position, making the NDP Canada’s official opposition party for the first time in its history. Politically polarized to the right and to the left, the Conservatives and the NDP are also at odds in their approach to the environment […]
Posted in Analysis, News and Notes, Canada, Environmental Management |
4 comments
Tags: 2011 election results, Canada, Climate Change, Conservative party, emissions trading scheme, environmental policy, ETS, ETS markets, NDP
Feb 4th, 2011 |
By Paul Manning
The Ontario Power Authority is developing two new Clean Energy Standard Offer Programs, one for natural gas-fired combined heat and power (CHPSOP), the other for energy recovery (ERSOP) from by-products fuel and under utilized energy resources. These programs potentially offer exciting opportunities for Ontario’s industries. Consultation will be carried out over the next couple of months.
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Posted in Canada, Environmental Management |
4 comments
Tags: Canada, CHPSOP, clean energy, ERSOP, Ontario, Ontario Power Authority, sustainability
Feb 3rd, 2011 |
By Paul Manning
The Ontario Power Authority is introducing a new Feed-In Tariff for commercial aggregators, called the CFIT (commercial feed-in-tariff) Program. The program is intended for micro-fit generation projects where the proponent has multiple projects, is not eligible for the microFIT program or needs to give its lender step in rights. The proposed price is 71.3 cents/kWh)
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Posted in Canada, Climate Change |
4 comments
Tags: Canada, environmental management, Feed-in Tariff program, micro-fit generation, Ontario, solar power