Abstract

Federal regulation of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions presents a difficult challenge for Canadian constitutional law. The federal government’s legislation to implement a national minimum standard of GHG emissions pricing, the Greenhouse Gas Pollution Pricing Act (GGPPA), and the trio of reference cases launched by Saskatchewan, Ontario, and Alberta questioning its constitutional validity, have brought the law and politics of GHG emissions pricing to the forefront of Canadian federalism. In the two appellate court decisions delivered to date, the legislation has been sustained as a valid exercise of Parliament’s power to legislation for the Peace, Order, and Good Government (POGG) of Canada. In each case, however, the Courts have expressed significant concern with respect to the impact of the legislation on provincial jurisdiction. We draw on recent and historic jurisprudence to characterize conceptual errors that have bedevilled POGG, specifically in the tendency to overestimate its impact on provincial jurisdiction. We then examine the existing interpretive principles that limit POGG’s ability to upend the critical balance inherent in the division of powers. Finally, we discuss how a properly empowered, calibrated, and constrained POGG relates to the GGPPA. We argue that the reduction of national GHG emissions constitutes a valid federal subject under the national concern branch of POGG, and that the GGPPA is a valid exercise of federal jurisdiction. We see no reason under the double aspect doctrine and cooperative federalism why provinces would lose any existing provincial jurisdiction as a result of the implementation of the GGPPA. Rather, a restrained approach to paramountcy, and the mechanics of the GGPPA itself suggest that provincial and federal legislation will work concurrently on GHGs. That seems to us entirely appropriate given the nature of the climate change crisis before us. In the legislative challenge of our time, we believe Canada’s Constitution is up to the task.

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