Canada's single-use plastic ban faces its first legal test - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 05:01 AM | Calgary | -13.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Politics

Canada's single-use plastic ban faces its first legal test

Canada's single-use plastic regulations face their first legal test today as the plastics lobby and the federal government head to court.

This weeks trial is being called one of Canadas largest environmental court cases

A bundle of colourful plastic straws.
Plastic-makers are challenging the federal government's regulations on plastics. (Jonathan Hayward/The Canadian Press)

Canada's single-use plastic regulations face their first legal test todayas the plastics lobby and the federal government head to court.

A federal court judge will hear arguments from lawyers on all sides from Tuesday to Thursday in Toronto.

The federal judge, who is not expected to deliver a ruling for months,must consider whether Ottawa was justified when it listed plastic products as toxic under the Canadian Environmental Protection Act.

"This is one of the largest environmental court cases that we have seen in Canada," said Anthony Merante, plastics campaigner at Oceana Canada, an intervener in the case.

"This is about tackling Canada's second most pertinent environmental crisis, which is the global plastics pollution crisis."

WATCH | Plastic makers say Ottawa's ban is flawed:

Plastic makers take Canada to court over single-use plastic ban

2 years ago
Duration 2:16
Plastic makers are challenging the federal governments ban on single use plastics in court, with a federal judge hearing arguments from governments, environmental groups and plastic companies about whether the ban is justified.

The Liberal government relied on a scientific assessment of plastic pollution published in 2020. It found that plastic pollutes rivers, lakes and other water bodies, harming wildlife and leavingmicroplastic fragmentsin the water we drink.

That report wassoon followed by several federal policy and regulatory moves, culminating most recently in the federal government officially announcing dates for a ban on the manufacture, sale and import of certain plastic products.

The ban affects checkout bags, straws, stir sticks and cutlery. Some of these prohibitions have already taken effect and some won't happen until 2025.

The federal government announced which single-use plastics will be covered by a national ban in 2022. (CBC Graphics)

As the government attempted to address the pollution problem, the plastic industry accused the government in legal briefs of introducing a plan with"fatal flaws." It's not the federal government's place, the complainants argue, to regulate plastic pollution when the provinces and territories typically handle waste management.

"The government's decision to regulate all plastic products may be motivated by laudable goals (e.g., diverting waste from municipal landfills and seizing the value of a circular plastics economy)," says acourt document filed on behalf of the plastics industry. "However, those goals must be pursued in accordance with the Constitution."

The plastics industry also alleges the federal government failed to demonstrate it had enough scientific evidence to justify the regulations.The industryargues Ottawa failed "to conduct a risk assessment" and "to characterize ecological exposure to all plastic products."

"The test for toxicity is not satisfied by proving that a single bottle cap poses a risk to a single animal," says a legal brief filed on behalf of the plastics industry.

The plastics companies bringing the case Dow Chemical Canada, Imperial Oil and Nova Chemicals declined to comment or didn't return CBC's requests for comment.The Responsible Plastic Use Coalition an industry group, also an applicant in the case did not respond.

A York University researcher who is not involved in the case said he believes the federal government's plastics policies, although well-intentioned, are rooted more in politics than science.

"What they are doing is responding to an optics issue where we see plastic bags in our environment and oceans," said Calvin Lakhan, a research scientist and co-investigator of the "Waste Wiki" project in the faculty of environmental studies. "That's things that consumers really care about."

The lifecycle analysis ofindividual plastic items, Lakhan said, is complex; hesuggested the Liberals' plastic pollution approach needs a rethink.

Protesters gather outside the federal court house in Toronto.
Protesters gather outside the federal court house in Toronto. A judge will hear arguments from lawyers on all sides from Tuesday to Thursday. (Michael Cole/ CBC)

Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault said in a media statement the Liberals are delivering on a campaign promise. He then went after the plasticsindustry.

"While a handful of big multinational companies try to stop our ban on harmful single-use plastics, we're going to keep fighting for the clean, healthy environment Canadians deserve," Guilbeault said in thestatement. "We're going to stick to the facts and science and deliver the sustainable options Canadians are asking for."

The court will hear from several interveners, including the American Chemistry Council, the American Fuel and Petrochemical Manufacturers and the governments of Alberta and Saskatchewan.

Several environmental groups, including Environmental Defence and Oceana, will also appear to askthe court to uphold the government's plastic regulations.

The lawyer representing the environmental groups, Ecojustice's Lindsay Beck, said a win for the government would solidify the push againstplastic pollution, while a loss would throw a wrench into those efforts.

If the court overturns the regulations,she said, it could have a domino effectthat could force the government to rescind its single-use plastic ban, which is also subject to its own court challenge.

A closeup of empty plastic containers that are part of an art installation.
A 2019 Deloitte study found less than one-tenth of the plastic waste Canadians produce is recycled. (Tijana Martin/The Canadian Press)

"It means that that ban would be vulnerable to being overturned," Beck said.

Federal data show that in 2019, 15.5 billion plastic grocery bags, 4.5 billion pieces of plastic cutlery, three billion stir sticks, 5.8 billion straws, 183 million six-pack rings and 805 million takeout containers were sold in Canada.

A 2019 Deloitte study found less than one-tenth of the plastic waste Canadians produce is recycled. That meant 3.3 million tonnes of plastic was being thrown out annually, almost half of it plastic packaging.

Newfoundland and Labrador, Prince Edward Island and Nova Scotia already have taken their own action against plastic bags, as have some cities, including Regina, Victoria and Montreal.

Sobeys eliminated single-use plastic bags at its checkout counters in 2020 and Walmart followed suit this past April. Loblaws announced Monday morning it will ban plastic bags by spring 2023.

Many fast food outlets have replaced plastic straws with paper versions over the last several years as well.

With files from the Canadian Press