ARTICLE
19 May 2009

Québec Introduces Climate Change Bill

DW
Davies Ward Phillips & Vineberg

Contributor

Davies is a law firm focused on high-stakes matters. Committed to achieving superior outcomes for our clients, we are consistently at the heart of their most complex deals and cases. With offices in Toronto, Montréal and New York, our capabilities extend seamlessly to every continent. Visit us at www.dwpv.com.
On May 12, 2009, the Québec government introduced Bill 42, which provides a framework for a provincial greenhouse gases ("GHG") cap-and-trade system, the details of which are to be fleshed out at a later time by the government in regulations and orders.
Canada Environment

On May 12, 2009, the Québec government introduced Bill 42, which provides a framework for a provincial greenhouse gases ("GHG") cap-and-trade system, the details of which are to be fleshed out at a later time by the government in regulations and orders. Key components of Bill 42 include the establishment of a public registry, GHG reduction targets for regulated sectors using 1990 as the baseline and a cap-and-trade system. Emission units would be obtained either by allocation or auction or through a cap-and-trade system with trading expected to be carried out on the Montreal Climate Exchange. Fees collected from emitters would be paid into a fund for climate change initiatives.

If passed, Bill 42 will enable Québec to meet its commitments in the Western Climate Initiative, a group of seven U.S. states and four Canadian provinces (British Columbia, Manitoba, Ontario and Québec) that have agreed to a common GHG emissions reduction target and are committed to a regional cap-and-trade system. British Columbia has already enacted climate change legislation to enable it to establish a cap-and-trade system and Manitoba and Ontario are expected to follow suit shortly. These provincial regimes will differ from the intensity-based approaches currently used in Alberta and proposed by the federal government.

Continued regulatory uncertainty has led to a growing consensus among Canadian business leaders on the urgent need for a clear and cohesive national carbon policy that would be compatible with the proposed U.S. carbon regime. However, given the current disparity between provincial and federal policy directions, a national carbon policy seems unlikely over the short term.

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.

Mondaq uses cookies on this website. By using our website you agree to our use of cookies as set out in our Privacy Policy.

Learn More