Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

A-528-02

A-549-02

2004 FCA 218

Atomic Energy Control Board and Cogema Resources Inc. (Appellants) (Respondents)

v.

Inter-Church Uranium Committee Educational Co-operative (Respondent) (Applicant)

and

Attorney General of Saskatchewan, Lac La Ronge Indian Band, Kitsaki Development Limited Partnership and Northern Resource Trucking Limited Partnership (Interveners)

Indexed as: Inter-Church Uranium Committee Educational Co-operative v. Canada (Atomic Energy Control Board) (F.C.A.)

Federal Court of Appeal, Richard C.J., Rothstein and Sharlow JJ.A.--Calgary, May 3, 4; Ottawa, June 4, 2004.

        Environment -- Licence issued by Atomic Energy Control Board authorizing operation of "tailings management facility" for uranium mine project -- Quashed by Federal Court as issuance not preceded by environmental assessment under Canadian Environmental Assessment Act (CEAA), s. 5 -- Environmental assessment already done under Environmental Assessment and Review Process Guidelines Order -- Project permitted to proceed under Board's staged licensing process -- CEAA, s. 74(1) engaged as Panel established for Project pursuant to Guidelines before CEAA came into force -- Under s. 74(1), Guidelines "shall continue to apply" in respect of any proposal for which panel established -- To interpret s. 74(1) as requiring second environmental assessment under CEAA not consistent with objective of provision as transitional rule -- Statutory scheme of CEAA not requiring second review.

        Construction of Statutes -- Operating licence issued by Atomic Energy Control Board ruled invalid by Federal Court as issuance not preceded by environmental assessment under CEAA, s. 5 -- Whether F.C. Judge erred in concluding CEAA, s. 74(1) did not relieve Board from requiring environmental assessment under CEAA prior to issuance of licence -- Question of statutory interpretation for which standard of review correctness -- S. 74(1) stating Guidelines "shall continue to apply" in respect of any proposal for which panel established -- No limit placed on continued application -- No useful purpose to require another environmental assessment under CEAA -- S. 74(1) transitional provision, intended to ensure orderly transition from one legislative scheme to another -- Principles underlying transitional law considered -- To interpret s. 74(1) as requiring second environmental assessment not consistent with objectives of CEAA.

        These were appeals from a Federal Court order granting the application of the respondent, Inter-Church Uranium Committee Educational Co-operative (the ICUCEC), to quash operating licence AECB-MFOL-170-0.5 (0.5 licence) issued in 2001 by the Atomic Energy Control Board to Cogema Resources Inc. The ICUCEC was formed in 1980 and incorporated in 1991 in order, among other things, to work toward phasing out uranium mining in Saskatchewan. The Board was established as an agency of the federal government by section 3 of the Atomic Energy Control Act. One of its responsibilities was to regulate uranium mining in Canada through a licensing regime set out in the Uranium and Thorium Mining Regulations. The most important feature of those Regulations is the "staged licensing", which requires a separate licence for each stage in the development and operation of a uranium production facility.

        The 0.5 licence authorized the operation of a "tailings management facility" for the McClean Lake Project, a uranium mine in northern Saskatchewan. It was ruled invalid because its issuance was not preceded by an environmental assessment under section 5 of the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act (CEAA). There had already been an environmental assessment under the Environmental Assessment and Review Process Guidelines Order (the Guidelines) which were in effect when the Project was first proposed. In 1991, a single joint federal-provincial panel was established under the Guidelines for a number of uranium mining proposals for northern Saskatchewan, including the McClean Lake Project. The Panel received numerous submissions, notably from the ICUCEC. It recommended that the McClean Lake Project be delayed for at least five years but, the Minister of Natural Resources did not accept the Panel's recommendation. The Project was permitted to proceed under the Board's staged licensing process. The CEAA was enacted in 1992 to replace the Guidelines with a different regime for environmental assessments. Included in the CEAA is a transitional provision, subsection 74(1), which provides that the Guidelines shall continue to apply in respect of any proposal that prior to the coming into force of this section was referred to the Minister for public review and for which an Environmental Assessment Panel was established by the Minister pursuant to that Order. The ICUCEC commenced an application for judicial review to challenge the Board's decision to issue the 0.5 licence on the ground that it was not preceded by an environmental assessment under the CEAA. The Trial Judge found the challenge to be well founded. Subsection 74(1) of the CEAA is clearly engaged because a Panel was established for the McClean Lake Project pursuant to the Guidelines before the CEAA came into force. The issue was whether the Trial Judge erred in concluding that subsection 74(1) did not relieve the Board from requiring an environmental screening or assessment under the CEAA prior to the issuance of the 0.5 licence.

        Held, the appeals should be allowed.

        The standard of review of this question of statutory interpretation is correctness.

        The appellants had argued in the Federal Court that subsection 74(1) is a complete answer to the allegation that the Board was required to carry out an additional screening or assessment pursuant to the CEAA before issuing the 0.5 licence. The interpretation of subsection 74(1) propounded by the appellants should be accepted because it is consistent with both the statutory language and the object of subsection 74(1). This provision states that the Guidelines "shall continue to apply" in respect of any proposal for which a panel has been established. There is no limit placed on this continued application. It would serve no useful purpose to require another environmental assessment under the CEAA at that stage. As the words of subsection 74(1) do not compel that conclusion, they should not be so interpreted. Subsection 74(1) is a transitional provision, and as such, is intended to ensure the orderly transition from one legislative scheme to another. Author of Driedger and Sullivan on the Construction of Statutes, professor Ruth Sullivan, listed the principles underlying transitional law as "certainty, predictability, stability, rationality and formal equality". To interpret subsection 74(1) as requiring a second environmental assessment under the CEAA would render the process under the Guidelines meaningless, and would require the work of the Panel to be repeated after the planning process is complete. Such interpretation is consistent neither with the objective of subsection 74(1) as a transitional rule, nor with important objectives of the CEAA as a whole. However, the end of the work of the Panel does not mean an end to all environmental review for the McClean Lake Project. Environmental issues must be considered for each licence issued under the Uranium and Thorium Mining Regulations and their successor, the Uranium Mines and Mills Regulations. The respondent pointed to several changes in the Project since 1993. However, none of these changes transformed the McClean Lake Project into a new proposal. The Panel recognized that changes in science and technology would occur over the life of the Project and acknowledged that it would be the Board's responsibility to evaluate the effects of these developments in the context of its licensing responsibilities. The respondent was seeking a fresh environmental assessment of a project that has already undergone scrutiny under the Guidelines. The statutory scheme of the CEAA does not require such a second review.

statutes and regulations judicially

considered

Atomic Energy Control Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. A-16, s. 3.

Canadian Environmental Assessment Act, S.C. 1992, c. 37, ss. 4 (as am. by S.C. 1994, c. 46, s. 1), 5, 11(1), 20(1)(a), 29, 74.

Canadian Environmental Protection Act, 1999, S.C. 1999, c. 33, Sch. 1.

Co-operatives Act, 1989 (The), S.S. 1989-90, c. C-37.2.

Co-operatives Act, 1996 (The), S.S. 1996, c. C-37.3.

Environmental Assessment Act (The), S.S. 1979-80, c. E-10.1.

Environmental Assessment and Review Process Guidelines Order, SOR/84-467, ss. 2 "proposal", 3, 10(1), 11(b), 12(b),(d),(e), 13, 21, 22, 26(1), 27(1), 29, 31, 33, 35(c).

Government Organization Act, 1979, S.C. 1978-79, c. 13, s. 14.

Nuclear Safety and Control Act, S.C. 1997, c. 9.

Uranium and Thorium Mining Regulations, SOR/88-243, ss. 7(2)(b), 8(2)(b), 11, 12, 13, 14, 15.

Uranium Mines and Mills Regulations, SOR/2000-206.

cases judicially considered

referred to:

Inter-Church Uranium Committee Educational Co-operative v. Canada (Atomic Energy Council Board) (2002), 300 N.R. 139 (F.C.A.); Canadian Wildlife Federation Inc. v. Canada (Minister of the Environment), [1989] 3 F.C. 309; [1989] 4 W.W.R. 526; (1989), 37 Admin. L.R. 39; 3 C.E.L.R. (N.S.) 287; 26 F.T.R. 245 (T.D.); affd [1990] 2 W.W.R. 69; (1989), 38 Admin. L.R. 138; 4 C.E.L.R. (N.S.) 1; 99 N.R. 72 (F.C.A.); Friends of the Oldman River Society v. Canada (Minister of Transport), [1992] 1 S.C.R. 3; (1992), 88 D.L.R. (4th) 1; [1992] 2 W.W.R. 193; 84 Alta. L.R. (2d) 129; 3 Admin. L.R. (2d) 1; 7 C.E.L.R. (N.S.) 1; 132 N.R. 321.

authors cited

Joint Federal-Provincial Panel on Uranium Mining Developments in Northern Saskatchewan (Canada). Uranium Mining Developments in Northern Saskatchewan: Dominique-Janine Extension, McClean Lake Project and Midwest Joint Venture: Report of the Joint Federal-Provincial Panel on Uranium Mining Developments in Northern Saskatchewan. Ottawa: Environment Canada, 1993.

Joint Federal-Provincial Panel on Uranium Mining Developments in Northern Saskatchewan (Canada). Midwest Uranium Mine Project: Cigar Lake Uranium Mine Project: Cumulative Observations: Report of the Joint Federal-Provincial Panel on Uranium Mining Developments in Northern Saskatchewan. Ottawa: Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency, 1997.

Sullivan, Ruth. Driedger and Sullivan on the Construction of Statutes, 4th ed. Toronto: Butterworths, 2002.

APPEALS from a Federal Court order ([2003] 2 F.C. 288; (2002), 49 C.E.L.R. (N.S.) 251; 224 F.T.R. 1) granting the respondent's application to quash operating licence AECB-MFOL-170-0.5 issued by the Atomic Energy Control Board to Cogema Resources Inc. Appeals allowed.

appearances:

Robert G. Richards, Q.C., for appellant (respondent) Cogema Resources Inc.

Kirk N. Lambrecht, Q.C., for appellant (respondent) Atomic Energy Control Board.

Stefania A. Fortugno and Theresa A. McClenaghan for respondent (applicant).

Barry J. Hornsberger, Q.C., for intervener Attorney General of Saskatchewan.

Brian J. Scherman, Q.C., for interveners Lac La Ronge Indian Band, Kitsaki Development Limited Partnership and Northern Resource Trucking Limited Partnership.

Northern Resource Trucking Limited Partnership, intervenantes.

solicitors of record:

MacPherson Leslie & Tyerman LLP, Regina, Saskatchewan, for appellant (respondent) Cogema Resources Inc.

Deputy Attorney General of Canada for appellant (respondent) Atomic Energy Control Board.

Fortugno Law Office, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, for respondent (applicant).

Saskatchewan Department of Justice, Regina, Saskatchewan, for intervener Attorney General of Saskatchewan.

Balfour Moss, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, for interveners Lac La Ronge Indian Band, Kitsaki Development Limited Partnership and Northern Resource Trucking Limited Partnership.

The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by

[1]Sharlow J.A.: These are appeals of an order of the Federal Court [then the Trial Division] dated September 23, 2002 ([2003] 2 F.C. 288), which granted the application of the respondent, Inter-Church Uranium Committee Educational Co-operative (the ICUCEC), to quash operating licence AECB-MFOL-170-0.5 (the 0.5 licence) issued by the Atomic Energy Control Board to Cogema Resources Inc. on June 21, 1999. The 0.5 licence authorized, among other things, the operation of a "tailings management facility" for the McClean Lake Project, a uranium mine in northern Saskatchewan approximately 350 kilometres north of the town of La Ronge. On November 7, 2002, the order under appeal was stayed by Noël J.A. pending the disposition of these appeals[(2002), 300 N.R. 139 (F.C.A.)].

[2]The basis of the order is that the 0.5 licence was invalid because its issuance was not preceded by an environmental assessment under section 5 of the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act, S.C. 1992, c. 37 (the CEAA). There had already been an environmental assessment under the Environmental Assessment and Review Process Guidelines Order, SOR/84-467 (the Guidelines) enacted under the Government Organization Act, 1979, S.C. 1978-79, c. 13, s. 14.

[3]Separate appeals of the order were commenced by Cogema and the Board. The appeals were heard together. It was not noticed until late in the proceedings that Cogema is the only proper appellant. The Board, as the maker of the impugned decision, should have been permitted intervener status at most. However, as none of the parties raised a timely objection on the question of status, the Board's appeal was permitted to proceed.

Facts

[4]The ICUCEC was formed in 1980 and incorporated in 1991 under The Co-operatives Act, 1989, S.S. 1989-90, c. C-37.2 (repealed and replaced by The Co-operatives Act, 1996, S.S. 1996, c. C-37.3). Its members represent a number of different churches, First Nations and Métis communities. One of the reasons for its incorporation was to work toward phasing out uranium mining in Saskatchewan (affidavit of Linda Kathryn Murphy, A.B., Vol. I, page 64). Whether that remains one of the goals of the ICUCEC is not clear. This case demonstrates its interest in trying to ensure, at least, that government decision makers who address issues relating to uranium mining adhere to all applicable environmental laws.

[5]Cogema operates a uranium mine in northern Saskatchewan known as the "McClean Lake Project", which is owned up to 70% by Cogema, 22.5% by Denison Mines Ltd. and 7.5% by OURD (Canada) Co. Ltd. (affidavit of Robert W. Pollock, A.B., Vol. VIII, page 1680). Uranium was discovered in the McClean Lake area in 1979.

[6]The Board was established as an agency of the federal government by section 3 of the Atomic Energy Control Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. A-16. One of its responsibilities was to regulate uranium mining in Canada through a licensing regime set out in the Uranium and Thorium Mining Regulations, SOR/88-243.

[7]For the purposes of these appeals, the most important feature of the Uranium and Thorium Mining Regulations is that they contemplate "staged licensing". That is, a separate licence is required for each stage in the development and operation of a uranium production facility, from the removal of uranium from the ground to the decommissioning of a uranium mine. Specifically, the Uranium and Thorium Mining Regulations require a licence to remove uranium from a removal site (section 11), to excavate uranium at an excavation site (section 12), to site or construct a mine or mill (section 13), to operate a mine or mill (section 14), and to suspend or cease a licensed activity at a mining facility or decommission a mining facility (section 15). The information required in an application for a licence for any of these stages, and the terms and conditions that may be imposed in a licence, are set out in the relevant sections of the Uranium and Thorium Mining Regulations.

[8]For every licence issued under the Uranium and Thorium Mining Regulations, the licensing authority must be satisfied that the applicant has provided adequately for the protection of the environment (see paragraph 7(2)(b) for licences under section 11, 12 or 15, and paragraph 8(2)(b) for licences under section 13 or 14).

[9]On May 31, 2000, the Nuclear Safety and Control Act, S.C. 1997, c. 9, came into force. It established the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission (the Commission) as a successor to the Board. At the same time, the Uranium and Thorium Mining Regulations were replaced by the Uranium Mines and Mills Regulations, SOR/2000-206. Nothing in these appeals turns on these changes in the regime for the regulation of uranium mining.

[10]During the period relevant to these appeals, it was the practice of the Board to issue licences with relatively short time frames. Each licence relating to a particular uranium production facility after the first one would supercede the preceding one. Activities covered by a prior licence would be included in the superceding licence if they were to be permitted to continue, so that only one licence would be in effect at any point in time.

[11]All proposals to mine uranium in Canada are affected by federal environmental legislation. As of June 22, 1984, the applicable law was set out in the Guidelines which, despite the title, imposed a mandatory requirement for environmental assessments of all proposals within its scope: Canadian Wildlife Federation Inc. v. Canada (Minister of the Environment), [1989] 3 F.C. 309 (T.D.), affirmed [1990] 2 W.W.R. 69 (F.C.A.); Friends of the Oldman River Society v. Canada (Minister of Transport), [1992] 1 S.C.R. 3.

[12]It is important to understand the Guidelines, as Cogema and the Board rely upon their compliance with the Guidelines as a foundation for the 0.5 licence and subsequent licences. The ICUCEC does not suggest that there has been a failure to comply with the Guidelines but argues that, for the 0.5 licence, there should have been compliance with both the CEAA and the Guidelines.

[13]The Guidelines were intended to ensure that every proposal within the decision-making authority of the federal government was "subject to an environmental screening or initial assessment to determine whether, and the extent to which, there may be any potentially adverse environmental effects from the proposal" (subsection 10(1) of the Guidelines). The scheme of the Guidelines contemplated an environmental assessment early in the planning stages, prior to the making of "irrevocable decisions" (section 3 of the Guidelines). The term "proposal" was defined in section 2 of the Guidelines as follows:

2. . . .

"proposal" includes any initiative, undertaking or activity for which the Government of Canada has a decision making responsibility.

[14]Initiating departments were required to refer proposals to the Minister of the Environment for public review by an environmental assessment panel if the potentially adverse environmental effects of the proposal were unknown or significant (paragraphs 12(d) and (e) of the Guidelines), if the proposal by its nature would have such significant adverse environmental effects that it would be referred automatically to the Minister for public review by a panel (subsections 11(b) and 12(b) of the Guidelines), or if public concern about the proposal was such that a public review was deemed to be desirable (section 13 of the Guidelines).

[15]The members of a panel were appointed by the Minister of the Environment pursuant to section 21 of the Guidelines. According to section 22, the members of a panel were required to:

22. . . .

(a) be unbiased and free of any potential conflict of interest relative to the proposal under review;

(b) be free of any political influence; and

(c) have special knowledge and experience relevant to the anticipated technical, environmental and social effects of the proposal under review.

[16]The terms of reference of each panel were set by the Minister of the Environment after consultation with the Minister responsible for the initiating department (subsection 26(1) of the Guidelines). The proceedings of a panel were public and were conducted, according to subsection 27(1) of the Guidelines, in a "non-judicial and informal but structured manner" (de manière informelle suivant des règles déterminées mais non judiciaires).

[17]The rules governing the proceedings of a panel allowed for public access to information submitted to a panel, and an opportunity for public input (section 29 of the Guidelines). Provision was also made for the negotiation of provincial participation in a public review by a panel (section 35(c) of the Guidelines). Following the review of a proposal, the panel was required to report its conclusions and recommendations to the Minister of the Environment and the Minister responsible for the initiating department, who were required to make the report available to the public (section 31 of the Guidelines).

[18]The additional responsibilities of an initiating department upon receipt of a report from a panel are set out in section 33 of the Guidelines, which reads in part as follows:

33. (1) It is the responsibility of the initiating department in a public review to

. . .

(c) subject to subsection (2), decide, in cooperation with any other department, agency or board of the Government of Canada to whom the recommendations of a Panel are directed, the extent to which the recommendations should become a requirement of the Government of Canada prior to authorizing the commencement of a proposal;

(d) subject to subsection (2), ensure, in cooperation with other bodies concerned with the proposal, that any decisions made by the appropriate Ministers as a result of the conclusions and recommendations reached by a Panel from the public review of a proposal are incorporated into the design, construction and operation of that proposal and that suitable implementation, inspection and environmental monitoring programs are established.

. . .

2. Where the initiating department has a regulatory function in respect of the proposal under review, the responsibilities set out in paragraphs (1)(c), (d) . . . shall be amended to account for and not to interfere with the decision making responsibilities of that initiating department.

[19]The Guidelines were in force in 1991, when the McClean Lake Project was first proposed. Also in force in Saskatchewan was The Environmental Assessment Act, S.S. 1979-80, c. E-10.1. For the purposes of these appeals, it is not necessary to consider the Saskatchewan statute in detail. It is enough to note that the regulatory authorities for Saskatchewan and Canada have cooperated from the outset in the regulation of the activities in issue in this case. The Attorney General of Saskatchewan has intervened to support these appeals.

[20]In 1991, a single joint federal-provincial panel (the Panel) was established under the Guidelines for a number of uranium mining proposals for northern Saskatchewan, including the McClean Lake Project [Uranium Mining Developments in Northern Saskatchewan: Dominique-Janine Extension, McClean Lake Project and Midwest Joint Venture: Report of the Joint Federal-Provincial Panel on Uranium Mining Developments in Northern Saskatchewan]. Its terms of reference read as follows [at pages 52-53]:

MANDATE

1. The panel shall review the environmental, health, safety and socio-economic impacts (hereinafter referred to as "impacts") of the proposed uranium mine developments (listed in Schedule A) in northern Saskatchewan and assess their acceptability.

In assessing the acceptability of the proposed developments, the panel will include in its review and consider:

a) the historical experience with past and existing uranium mining operations in Saskatchewan;

b) the cumulative impacts of existing operations and the proposed developments;

c) the short and long term impacts of the proposed projects, spanning their construction phase, operating period, decommissioning phase and post-decommissioning phase;

d) the impact of employment and socio-economic opportunities afforded northern residents by the proponents and the measures necessary for implementation of those opportunities;

e) the adequacy of measures proposed by the project proponents to protect environmental quality and to safeguard worker health and safety, and whether the measures can be expected to meet the requirements of Canadian and Saskatchewan law, regulations and policies applicable to uranium mine developments;

f) the adequacy of monitoring, enforcement and compliance systems to ensure that measures necessary for mitigating adverse impacts can be implemented; and

g) the benefits afforded by the proposals.

2. The panel shall determine from its review whether a project is acceptable or unacceptable.

In concluding that a project is acceptable, the panel may recommend that specified minimum terms and conditions, including any mitigative measures or any other measures relating to the impacts under the panel's review, be implemented where it considers these necessary for the protection of health, safety and the environment or for dealing responsibly with socio-economic concerns. The panel may also suggest measures that it considers would enhance the acceptability of the proposals.

If the panel concludes a project is unacceptable, it shall provide its reasons for this conclusion.

3. In fulfilling its mandate, the panel shall provide full opportunities for public consultation and review.

REVIEW PROCEDURES

Detailed written procedures for conducting the review shall be established by the panel and made available to the public.

TECHNICAL EXPERTS

The panel may secure the services of independent technical experts to assist and advise on complex technical and/or socio-economic issues related to its mandate. Such experts will also be available to respond to enquiries from review participants.

STAGES OF THE REVIEW

Schedule A lists the five proposals to be reviewed by the panel. The five proposals have been referred due to potentially significant or unknown adverse environmental effects and public concern.

While all of the proposals are in the planning stage, some are further advanced than others. Environmental Impact Statements (EIS) have been prepared for the first three proposals listed in Schedule A, one of which (Dominique- Janine Extension) is associated with the existing operating uranium mining facility and two of which are for new uranium mining facilities. EIS documents have yet to be prepared for the last two proposals listed in Schedule A. The panel will take the differing stages of these projects into consideration when scheduling its review.

The panel will seek public comment on the three available EIS's and determine their adequacy before proceeding to public hearings. When the panel is satisfied with the information provided, including that with respect to the cumulative impacts, it may report on one or more of these projects to the Ministers as described in the following stages of the review. The panel shall submit its final report(s) on these proposals within 18 months of its appointment.

In reviewing the remaining two proposals, the panel will conduct scoping sessions in appropriate communities to solicit public comment and, based on these comments and its own consideration, prepare and issue Guidelines to the respective proponents for the preparation of EIS's. The cumulative impacts of these two proposals will be considered when the EIS documents have been submitted. The stages of the review following submission of these documents to the panel are outlined below. The panel shall submit its final report(s) on these two proposals within 18 months of receipt of the proponents' EIS's.

1. Review of Information

a) Review of the available information on the environmental, health, safety and socio-economic impacts of the uranium mining industry in Saskatchewan to date. The information and any related reports prepared will be made available to the public.

b) Review of the past performance of the uranium mining industry in providing employment and socio-economic opportunities to northern residents. The information and any related reports prepared will be made available to the public.

c) Review by the panel of Environmental Impact Statements (EISs) submitted by the proponents. The EISs will also be made available to the public for review and written comment.

d) The panel may draw on proponents, technical agencies from within federal or provincial governments, independent experts and the public for available information.

2. Should the panel, after reviewing the above information and considering public comments, deem an EIS deficient it may request additional information from the project proponent.

3. Once the panel is satisfied with the information provided, it will announce public hearings for the project in question. If appropriate, the hearings may be structured to address more than one project.

For the purposes of promoting public awareness and facilitating public comment, the panel will hold meetings and /or hearings in the appropriate northern communities, Regina, Saskatoon and in such other Saskatchewan communities as the panel may think necessary.

4. When the panel is in a position, following the completion of public hearings, to provide a report on its findings, conclusions and recommendations relevant to a specific project, it will submit the report to the federal Ministers of Environment and of Energy, Mines and Resources and to the Saskatchewan Minister of Environment and Public Safety.

The panel should, to the extent possible, ensure that the timely review of a specific project is not jeopardized by delays in the review of another project included in its mandate.

LINKAGE TO OTHER POLICY PROCESSES

The panel is not expected to interpret its mandate so as to duplicate the work of other public inquiries and policy processes or to focus on national or international issues which are not directly related to the impacts of the proposals.

However, concerns may be raised by the public which extend beyond the impacts of direct concern to the panel, and in such cases the panel will ensure that the public is provided a reasonable opportunity to express these concerns.

SCHEDULE A

EIS Submitted

1.     Dominique-Janine Extension

Amok Ltd.

2.     South McMahon Lake Project

Midwest Joint Venture (Denison Mines Ltd.)

3.     McClean Lake Project

Minatco Ltd. [later replaced by Cogema]

EIS to be prepared

4.     McArthur River Project

McArthur River Joint Venture (Cameco Corporation)

5.     Cigar Lake Project

Cigar Lake Mining Corporation

[21]The uranium deposits relevant to this case are referred to as the Sue A, B and C deposits and the JEB deposit, which were proposed to be developed as an open pit mine. That aspect of the McClean Lake Project was considered by the Panel and is described as follows in its first Report, issued in October 1993 [at page 41]:

The open pit mining operations for the JEB and Sue A, B and C deposits would involve overburden stripping and waste rock mining, followed by mining of the ore zones. A lined ore storage pad for the stockpiling of ore would be located close to the JEB pit. The pad would be used by mining operations at all six ore bodies. Waste rock and overburden would be placed in prepared areas close to the open pits, and might be used subsequently for construction activities if tests showed the material to be suitable.

The Sue A, B and C pits would have a waste rock disposal site, a water treatment plant, contaminated-water holding ponds, and treated-water monitoring ponds.

The McClean Lake proposal includes the building of a mill complex where the ore would be processed to produce yellow-cake. A water treatment facility would be built at the mill complex, located near the JEB pit. Water collected by the drainage systems for the ore storage pad would be processed here, as would JEB minewater, collected runoff, and tailings seepage water. It would also treat mill process waste streams and tailings decant water from the mill. Treated water would be pumped to Sink Lake for regulated discharge through Vulture Lake to McClean Lake . . . .

Tailings from the milling process would be deposited in the mined-out JEB pit for disposal using the pervious surround concept. This would require that the ore from JEB be removed and stored while the pit is being prepared to receive the tailings.

Ancillary facilities would include a shop and change rooms at the Sue site; offices, warehouses, shops, change rooms, a power generator plant, contaminated water storage ponds and treated water monitoring ponds at the mill site; fans and air heaters, electric power generators, minewater sedimentation ponds, a waste rock disposal area and an ore transfer pad at the McClean Lake underground mine site; and a camp designed to accommodate construction and production crews for all sites, to be built 800 m from the mill.

All active areas would be linked by roads and power lines. Pipelines would be used to transport minewater from the McClean Lake underground mine to the Sue Water treatment plant, and from the Sue and JEB treatment plants to Sink Lake.

It is proposed that the McClean Lake project and the Midwest Joint Venture be developed in a complementary way, with the McClean Lake site developed first, and the Midwest Joint Venture brought into production by 1999. Ore from the Midwest site would be milled at the JEB mill; tailings from the Midwest operation would also be disposed of in the mined-out JEB pit.

[22]The Panel received numerous submissions, including submissions from the ICUCEC. The list of submissions is set out in Appendix D to the Report [pages 55-60]. Details of the steps taken by the Panel, including a list of hearings, are set out in Appendix C to the Report [page 54]. The Panel's conclusion with respect to the McClean Lake Project was that it be delayed for at least five years, and that approval at that time be subject to a number of conditions.

[23]The Panel was particularly concerned with the problem of tailings management. Broadly speaking, tailings may be stored above ground or in the ground. For the McClean Lake Project, the proposal was to store them in the ground, in the pit left after the excavation of the JEB deposit. After decommissioning of the mine, in-ground facilities would be required to divert ground water around the tailings, either by relying on an envelope of porous rock and gravel constructed around the tailings (pervious surround), or by relying on the permeability of the natural rock surrounding the tailings (natural surround).

[24]The initial proposal for the JEB pit was to use a pervious surround method. The Panel discussed that aspect of the proposal at page 45 of the October 1993 Report (emphasis in original):

Tailings management can also have a substantial deleterious effect on the quality of surface water downstream from the mine site. For this project, it has been proposed that the mined-out JEB pit be used as a pervious surround disposal facility to contain mill tailings from both the McClean Lake project and the Midwest Joint Venture mine. The use of one tailings facility for two projects should be environmentally beneficial because it would reduce the proliferation of such sites. Placement of the tailings in a pit would also decrease the likelihood of surface water contamination (but raises the spectre of possible ground water contamination).

Despite these theoretical advantages, we were reminded by the public that the pervious surround method for tailings containment has not yet been adequately tested. The only such pit in the Athabaska Basin, the nearby Rabbit Lake facility, has not been in operation long enough to demonstrate its viability. It is the panel's opinion that it would be prudent to observe the operation of that facility for a few more years before deciding on whether or not to license another. This is one of the primary reasons why we are recommending a delay in the start-up of this project for at least five years. The time interval will provide the regulatory agencies with an opportunity to observe and evaluate the facility at Rabbit Lake; it will also undoubtedly provide the proponents with information that can be used to improve the design of the JEB facility.

[25]On December 23, 1993, the Minister of Natural Resources published a response to the Panel's report. By that time, Cogema had taken over from the original proponent. The Minister did not accept the Panel's recommendation for a five-year delay of the McClean Lake Project. Rather, the Project was permitted to proceed under the Board's staged licensing process. It was anticipated that the Board's process would take several years, and would over time deal with all of the issues raised by the Panel relating to the tailings management problems.

[26]The final choice of the appropriate technique for the tailings management facility was the natural surround method. That choice followed further work by the Panel, culminating in its final Report in November 1997 (A.B., Vol. VIIIA, pages 1686.5-1686.131). The following comment appears at pages 1-2 of that Report [Midwest Uranium Mine Project: Cigar Lake Uranium Mine Project: Cumulative Observations: Report of the Joint Federal-Provincial Panel on Uranium Mining Developments in Northern Saskatchewan]:

We recommend approval of the concept for tailings disposal represented by the JEB Tailings Management Facility (TMF) proposal, but with major site-specific reservations. The proposed JEB TMF, to be constructed using natural surround technology, is an attractive option for tailings disposal because it provides an opportunity to realize several environmental benefits relative to other methods for tailings disposal. Among these benefits are an increase in worker protection through the use of subaqueous deposition; reduction of the number of locations undergoing environmental disruption, as a result of combining deposition of tailings from many ore bodies at one site; the avoidance of engineered barriers; the minimization of weathering problems; and the protection of the contents of the pit from scarification by glaciers during the next ice age. Because of these potential advantages, the concept for tailings disposal represented by the JEB TMF proposal is recommended. However, there are critical site-specific technical and managerial concerns that must be resolved before application of the concept can be recommended for this particular tailings management facility. Chief among the technical concerns is the need for convincing evidence that operation of the TMF would not result in the contamination of Fox Lake in the long term. There is also concern about the managerial and scientific competence of the proponent and its attitude toward the regulators.

We are aware that resolution of these concerns, likely to cause a long delay in the licensing process, would have fiscal implications. The wish to maximize immediate economic benefits from the development of these resources does not, however, justify the approval of this facility until it has been demonstrated that all reasonable environmental safeguards are in place.

[27]The recommendations made by the Panel were subsequently addressed through the licensing process (see Board member document 99-53, A.B., Vol. II, page 1399).

[28]The Board has issued the following licences for the McClean Lake Project:

1994

Mining facility removal licence AECB-MFRL-148-2, for the preparation of the site by removal of surface vegetation and materials.

June 29, 1994

Mining facility construction licence AECB- MFCL-169-0, for the construction of all necessary surface support facilities, in preparation to mine four open pits, one underground mine and to operate a mill and a waste treatment system. (A.B., Vol. II, page 482).

December 19, 1994

Mining facility construction licence AECB-MFCL- 169-0.1, to change the milling process from a strong acid to an ammonium sulphate stripping process in the solvent extraction circuit (A.B., Vol. II, page 557).

September 18, 1995

Mining facility construction licence AECB -MFCL-169- 0.2, an amendment to 169-0.1, to permit surface stripping of the JEB pit and the operation of associated dewatering and water treatment facilities. (A.B., Vol. III, page 645).

March 12, 1996

    Mining facility operating licence AECB-MFOL- 170-0, to permit operation of the JEB open pit mine and associated surface facilities including a water treatment plant, JEB dewatering system, and the Sink/Vulture treated effluent management system for a two year period upon attainment of certain approvals. Expiry date: March 12, 1998 (A.B., Vol. III, page 762).

February 27, 1997

Mining facility operating licence AECB-MFOL- 170-0.1, to permit preparation of the SUE C1 pit for uranium mining and to operate the associated surface facilities including a water treatment plant and the effluent discharge line to the Sink/Vulture treated effluent management system, for the period February 20, 1997 to March 12, 1998. Expiry date: March 12, 1998 (A.B., Vol. IV, page 894).

August 14, 1998

Mining facility operating licence AECB-MFOL-170-0.3, to proceed with the preparatory work to construct the dewatering drift, the raise system and the filter drain for the JEB pit tailings management facility (A.B., Vol. V, page 1193).

March 26, 1999

Mining facility operating licence AECB-MFOL-170-0.4, to permit the construction of the JEB pit tailings management facility and associated tailings and water handling systems. Expiry date: September 30, 1999. (A.B., Vol., page 1383).

June 21, 1999*

The licence in issue in these appeals.

Mining facility operating licence AECB-MFOL-170-0.5, to permit the operation of the JEB mill and the JEB pit tailings management facility. Expiry date: June 30, 2001 (A.B., Vol. VII, page 1631).

November 9, 1999

Mining facility operating licence AECB-MFOL-170-0.6, to mine the Sue open pits and to process the ore from the SUE and the JEB pits at the McClean Lake mill, disposing of the tailings in the JEB pit tailings management facility.

May 29, 2000

Mining facility operating licence AECB-MFOL- 170-0.7, to permit the operation of the JEB mill and the JEB pit tailings management facility, including storage of tailings in the tailings management facility, to mine the SUE pits and to operate the associated ore and waste management and effluent treatment systems. This licence was similar to the preceding one, but included certain conditions required to facilitate compliance with international agreements related to safeguards for nuclear materials. Expiry date: June 30, 2001 (A.B., Vol. XI, page 2027).

[29]In 2001, after the Uranium Mines and Mills Regulations came into force, the Commission issued two further licences to Cogema in respect of the McClean Lake Project. The first was Uranium Mine Operating Licence UMOL-MINEMILL-McCLEAN.08/2001, issued on June 25, 2001, which was in effect from July 1, 2001, to August 31, 2001. It essentially extended the term of the last licence issued by the Board (AECB-MFOL-170-0.7).

[30]On August 23, 2001, the Commission issued Uranium Mine Operating Licence UMOL-MINEMILL-McCLEAN.09/2005. It came into effect on September 1, 2001, and expires on August 31, 2005 (A.B., Vol. XI, pages 2042-2054 and pages 2078-2091). The McClean Lake Project, including the JEB tailings management facility, is currently being operated under that licence.

[31]The CEAA was enacted in 1992 to replace the Guidelines with a different regime for environmental assessments. The substantive provisions of the CEAA came into force on January 19, 1995 (SI/95-11), after the issuance of the second construction licence for the McClean Lake Project (AECB-MFCL-169-0.1) and before the issuance of the first operating licence (AECB-MFOL-170-0).

[32]The purposes of the CEAA are stated in section 4 [as am. by S.C. 1994, c. 46, s. 1], which reads as follows:

4. The purposes of this Act are

(a) to ensure that the environmental effects of projects receive careful consideration before responsible authorities take actions in connection with them;

(b) to encourage responsible authorities to take actions that promote sustainable development and thereby achieve or maintain a healthy environment and a healthy economy;

(b.1) to ensure that responsible authorities carry out their responsibilities in a coordinated manner with a view to eliminating unnecessary duplication in the environmental assessment process;

(c) to ensure that projects that are to be carried out in Canada or on federal lands do not cause significant adverse environmental effects outside the jurisdictions in which the projects are carried out; and

(d) to ensure that there be an opportunity for public participation in the environmental assessment process.

[33]It is not necessary for the purposes of these appeals to identify the differences between the environ-mental assessment and public review procedures mandated by the CEAA and those mandated by the Guidelines. It is not alleged that the Guidelines are deficient in any substantial way, or that an environmental problem associated with the McClean Lake Project was missed or ignored because of the application of the Guidelines and not the CEAA.

[34]Included in the CEAA is a transitional provision which reads as follows:

74. (1) The Environmental Assessment and Review Process Guidelines Order, approved by Order in Council P.C. 1984-2132 of June 21, 1984 and registered as SOR/84-467, shall continue to apply in respect of any proposal that prior to the coming into force of this section was referred to the Minister for public review and for which an Environmental Assessment Panel was established by the Minister pursuant to that Order.

(2) The Order referred to in subsection (1) shall continue to apply in respect of any proposal for which an environmental screening or initial assessment under that Order was commenced before the coming into force of this section, but where any such proposal is referred to the Minister for public review pursuant to section 20 of that Order, this Act shall thereupon apply and the Minister may refer the project to a mediator or a review panel in accordance with section 29.

(3) Where a proponent proposes to carry out, in whole or in part, a project for which an environmental screening or an initial assessment was conducted in accordance with the Order referred to in subsection (1), and

(a) the project did not proceed after the assessment was completed,

(b) in the case of a project that is in relation to a physical work, the proponent proposes an undertaking in relation to that work different from that proposed when the assessment was conducted,

(c) the manner in which the project is to be carried out has subsequently changed, or

(d) the renewal of a licence, permit, approval or other action under a prescribed provision is sought,

the responsible authority may use or permit the use of the environmental screening or initial assessment and the report thereon to whatever extent it is appropriate to do so for the purpose of complying with section 18 or 21.

(4) Where the construction or operation of a physical work or the carrying out of a physical activity was initiated before June 22, 1984, this Act shall not apply in respect of the issuance or renewal of a licence, permit, approval or other action under a prescribed provision in respect of the project unless the issuance or renewal entails a modification, decommissioning, abandonment or other alteration to the project, in whole or in part.

[35]The second licence issued by the Commission in 2001 under the Uranium Mines and Mills Regulations, UMOL-MINEMILL-McCLEAN.09/2005, was subject to an environmental screening report under the CEAA because Cogema wished to produce up to 8 million pounds of uranium concentrate per year. That was an increase of up to 2 million pounds per year beyond that considered by the Panel established under the Guidelines. As I understand it, the "project" that was the subject of that screening report was not the McClean Lake Project itself, but only the increase in production. The Commission determined, pursuant to paragraph 20(1)(a) of the CEAA, that "the project, taking into account the appropriate mitigation measures, is not likely to cause significant adverse environmental effects" (A.B., Vol. XI, page 2072). As a consequence, the proposal for increased production was not referred to the Minister for referral to a mediator or panel pursuant to section 29 of the CEAA. The decision to issue licence UMOL-MINEMILL-McCLEAN.09/2005 was made on August 9, 2001, and has not been challenged.

The application for judicial review

[36]On July 19, 1999, the ICUCEC commenced an application for judicial review to challenge the June 21, 1999, decision of the Board to issue the 0.5 licence. The application was heard on September 12, 2002, after the expiry date of the 0.5 licence, and during the term of the current operating licence, UMOL-MINEMILL- McCLEAN.09/2005.

[37]The challenge to the 0.5 licence is based on the fact that it was not preceded by an environmental screening report or an environmental assessment under the CEAA. The Judge found the challenge to be well founded. He concluded that the licence was invalid, for the reasons set out in paragraph 72 of his judgment:

The legal question to be answered in the present case is: Does CEAA apply to the McClean Lake Project? I find that the answer is: Yes. I recognize that a great deal of effort has been put into the supervision of the project by the AECB, and that the AECB is confident that, in applying its regulatory processes, all consideration has been given to health and safety, security, and protection of the environment. However, I find that the obligation to comply with the provisions of CEAA is mandatory, and, thus, its provisions must be followed.

[38]The appellants had argued in the Federal Court that subsection 74(1) of the CEAA is a complete answer to the allegation that the Board was required to carry out an additional screening or assessment pursuant to the CEAA before issuing the 0.5 licence. The Judge rejected that argument, although he recognized at paragraph 35 of his reasons that the operation of the JEB pit tailings management facility was considered by the Panel.

[39]It is clear that subsection 74(1) is engaged in this case because a Panel was established for the McClean Lake Project pursuant to the Guidelines before the CEAA came into force. However, the Judge reasoned as follows that compliance with the CEAA was also required (paragraph 42 of his reasons):

By subsection 74(1), where a proposal has been referred to the Minister and a panel has been appointed under [the Guidelines] prior to CEAA coming into force, the panel is to go ahead and complete its work under [the Guidelines] even though CEAA is in effect. It is important to note in this respect that there is no mention in the transition provision about what is to occur after the panel completes its work. In my opinion, since CEAA is in effect at that time, CEAA applies.

Discussion

[40]The threshold issue in these appeals is whether, as the Board and Cogema argue, the Judge erred in concluding that subsection 74(1) of the CEAA did not relieve the Board from requiring an environmental screening or assessment under the CEAA prior to the issuance of the 0.5 licence. This is a question of statutory interpretation for which the standard of review is correctness.

[41]Section 74 of the CEAA maps the transition from the Guidelines regime to the CEAA regime. For ease of reference, subsection 74(1) is reproduced here:

74. (1) The Environmental Assessment and Review Process Guidelines Order, approved by Order in Council P.C. 1984-2132 of June 21, 1984 and registered as SOR/84-467, shall continue to apply in respect of any proposal that prior to the coming into force of this section was referred to the Minister for public review and for which an Environmental Assessment Panel was established by the Minister pursuant to that Order.

[42]I must respectfully disagree with the Judge that the absence in subsection 74(1) of any explanation as to what is to occur after a panel completes its work under the Guidelines indicates that the process mandated by the CEAA must be undertaken for the same project. In my view, the interpretation of subsection 74(1) propounded by the Board and Cogema should be accepted because it is consistent with both the statutory language and the object of subsection 74(1).

[43]Subsection 74(1) states that the Guidelines "shall continue to apply" (continue de s'appliquer) in respect of any proposal for which a panel has been established. There is no limit placed on this continued application. Subsection 74(2), in contrast, provides that the Guidelines continue to apply to an initial screening or assessment until it is referred to public review, and then states that, when a referral is made, "this Act [CEAA] shall thereupon apply". Unlike subsection 74(2), subsection 74(1) does not need to deal with a track change from the Guidelines to the CEAA because the completion of the work of a panel under the Guidelines marks the end of the environmental review process for the proposal it is reviewing, and the commencement of the process for implementing the proposal, including the making of decisions required under applicable regulatory controls. It would serve no useful purpose to require another environmental assessment under the CEAA at that stage. As the words of subsection 74(1) do not compel that conclusion, they should not be so interpreted.

[44]The purpose of subsection 74(1), read in the context of the remainder of section 74 and other provisions of the CEAA, also supports the interpretation propounded by the Board and Cogema. Subsection 74(1) is a transitional provision, and as such is intended to ensure the orderly transition from one legislative scheme to another. Professor Ruth Sullivan lists the principles underlying transitional law as "certainty, predictability, stability, rationality, and formal equality" (Driedger and Sullivan on the Construction of Statutes, 4th ed., Toronto: Butterworths, 2002, at pages 544-545). She goes on to say:

. . . it is unfair to take people by surprise. It is unfair to establish rules, invite people to rely on them, then change them in mid-stream, especially if the change results in negative consequences.

[45]To interpret subsection 74(1) as requiring a second environmental assessment under the CEAA renders that process under the Guidelines meaningless, and requires the work of the Panel to be repeated after the planning process is complete. That is not consistent with the objective of subsection 74(1) as a transitional rule.

[46]Nor is it consistent with two of the important objectives of the CEAA, namely, the avoidance of the unnecessary duplication of work (see paragraph 4(b.1) of the CEAA, quoted above), and the general understanding of environmental assessment as a planning tool to ensure that government decision makers consider environmental issues early in the planning process of projects: Friends of the Oldman River (cited above), at paragraph 71. Subsection 11(1) of the CEAA reads as follows:

11. (1) Where an environmental assessment of a project is required, the federal authority referred to in section 5 in relation to the project shall ensure that the environmental assessment is conducted as early as practicable in the planning stages of the project and before irrevocable decisions are made, and shall be referred to in this Act as the responsible authority in relation to the project.

[47]That does not mean that the end of the work of the Panel means an end to all environmental review for the McClean Lake Project. Environmental issues must be considered for each licence issued under the Uranium and Thorium Mining Regulations and their successor, the Uranium Mines and Mills Regulations. In addition, the CEAA environmental screening and assessment process may be triggered in future if subsection 74(3) of the CEAA applies. That would be the case if, for example, there is a proposal to undertake some activity relating to the McClean Lake Project that was not within the Panel's terms of reference (such as the increase in production proposed and permitted by the Commission in 2001, which had not been considered by the Panel established under the Guidelines).

[48]The ICUCEC is concerned that too narrow an interpretation of subsection 74(1) of the CEAA could mean that when the McClean Lake Project is finally decommissioned many years from now, there will be no new environmental assessment. Such concerns are speculative at this stage. The extent to which a new environmental assessment will be required for a decommissioning licence will depend on the circumstances at that time, and the precise proposal that is presented to the Commission in the application for a decommissioning licence.

[49]The ICUCEC also argued that subsection 74(1) of the CEAA does not apply because the current McClean Lake Project is not the same "proposal" that was reviewed by the Panel under the Guidelines. The ICUCEC points to several changes in the Project since 1993, including a change in the proponent and majority owner, design changes, the discovery of new environmental threats from arsenic, a scientific study indicating radioactive contaminant can migrate over long distances in groundwater faster than originally thought, a new regulatory climate with regard to water quality guidelines for arsenic, and the addition of radionuclides from uranium mills to the List of Toxic Substances in Schedule I to the Canadian Environmental Protection Act, 1999, S.C. 1999, c.33. In my view, none of these changes transform the McClean Lake Project into a new proposal. The Panel recognized that changes in science and technology would occur over the life of the Project and acknowledged that it would be the Board's responsibility to evaluate the effects of these developments in the context of its licensing responsibilities.

[50]The ICUCEC's position is driven by the honestly held opinions of its members regarding the harmful effects of uranium mining. However, the ICUCEC is seeking a fresh environmental assessment of a project that has already undergone scrutiny under the Guidelines. The statutory scheme of the CEAA does not require such a second review.

[51]As subsection 74(1) of the CEAA is dispositive of these appeals and the application for judicial review, it is unnecessary to consider the remaining arguments made by the appellants.

[52]I would allow the appeals, set aside the order of the Federal Court dated September 23, 2002, and dismiss the application for judicial review. Cogema should be awarded its costs in this Court and in the Federal Court. Counsel for the Board indicated that the Board is not seeking costs.

Richard C.J.: I agree.

Rothstein J.A.: I agree.

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