Judge says Ottawa listing plastic items as toxic was 'unreasonable and unconstitutional' - Action News
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Judge says Ottawa listing plastic items as toxic was 'unreasonable and unconstitutional'

A Federal Court judge has ruled that a federal government decision to list plastic items as toxic was "unreasonable and unconstitutional."

Adding plastics to list of toxic substances a key step that allowed Ottawa to ban single-use plastics

Federal Court overturns national single-use plastics ban

10 months ago
Duration 2:01
Many single-use plastics were set to be banned across the country in December, but the Federal Court ruled it unconstitutional on Thursday. But it still may not mean a comeback for plastic bags and straws.

A Federal Court judge has ruled that a federal government decision to list plastic items as toxic was "unreasonable and unconstitutional."

In a ruling released Thursday, Justice Angela Furlanettowrote that the category of plastic manufactured items was too broad to be given a blanket toxicity label under federal law.

"There is no reasonable apprehension that all listed [plastic manufactured items] are harmful," Furlanetto wrote.

The case was brought forward by a group of major industrial players in plastics,including Dow Chemical, Imperial Oil and Nova Chemicals. They argued that Ottawa failed to demonstrate it had enough scientific evidence to justify the regulations.

Environment Minister Steven Guilbeaultsaid the federal government is reviewing Thursday's decision and is "strongly considering an appeal."

A close up on a man with a beard as he speaks to reporters who are not pictured.
Minister of Environment and Climate Change Steven Guilbeault says the government is considering appealing the decision. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

"Canadians have been loud and clear that they want action to keep plastic out of our environment," he said in a statement posted on X, formerly Twitter. "That's what we'll keep fighting for."

The move to list plastic items as toxic was a key step that allowed Ottawa to proceed with a ban on some single-use plastic items. Those regulations will prohibit the sale of plastic checkout bags, cutlery, food service ware, stir sticks and straws in Canada after Dec.20.

Lindsay Beck, a lawyer who acted on behalf of environmental groups that intervened in the case, called Thursday's decision "disappointing."

"We know that plastic pollution is one of the major environmental crises of our time and this [ruling] really hampers the federal government's ability to come to grips with this crisis," Beck told CBC News.

Regulating waste management is generally a provincial responsibility.The government is only able to regulate substances for environmental protection if they are listed as toxic under the Canadian Environmental Protection Act.

Thousands of plastic bottles and containers are sprawled across black sand with blue water and light blue sky in the background.
Federal regulations are supposed to prohibit the sale of single-use plastic checkout bags, cutlery, food service ware, stir sticks and straws in Canada after Dec. 20. (AFP via Getty Images)

But Furlanetto wrote that adding a broad category of plastics to the list went beyond the rules of the Act.

"Not every item within [the plastic manufactured items category] has the potential to create a reasonable apprehension of harm,"Furlanettowrote.

The judge also wrote that Ottawa's decision "poses a threat to the balance of federalism" because it didn't restrict its regulations to those plastics that have "potential to cause harm to the environment."

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith and her Environment MinisterRebecca Schulz said Ottawa's initial decision to add plastics to the toxic substance list was an example of "federal overreach."

A woman with brown hair in a blue suit stands at a podium.
Alberta Premier Danielle Smith is urging Ottawa not to appeal the decision. (Jason Franson/The Canadian Press)

"It's time for the federal government to listen to the courts and to Canadians. We urge them to not appeal this decision, and to immediately delete 'plastic manufactured items'from [the toxic substance list]," they said in a joint statement.

The case dealt specifically with an order-in-council that originally added plastic manufactured items to the toxic substance list. Those items were then listed as toxic by law after Bill S-5 received royal assent in June.

Ottawa tried to arguethat the judge's ruling willnot affect its single-use plastics bandue to S-5's passage.While Furlanetto quashed the original order-in-council, she didn't rule on the constitutionalvalidity of S-5.

But Beck said that by quashing the order-in-council, the judge effectively struck down the government's reasoning for adding plastics to the toxic substance list under S-5.

With files from David Thurton and The Canadian Press