Date:
20130826
Docket:
T-153-13
Citation:
2013 FC 900
Ottawa, Ontario,
August 26, 2013
PRESENT: THE
CHIEF JUSTICE
BETWEEN:
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HUPACASATH FIRST NATION
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Applicant
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and
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THE MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS
CANADA AND THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA
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Respondents
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REASONS FOR
JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
This
is an application for judicial review regarding the pending ratification of the
Agreement between the Government of Canada and the Government of the
People’s Republic of China for the Promotion and Reciprocal Protection of
Investments [CCFIPPA].
[2]
The
Applicant, Hupacasath
First Nation [HFN], seeks a declaration that Canada is required to engage in a
process of consultation and accommodation with First Nations, including HFN,
prior to ratifying or taking other steps that will bind Canada under the CCFIPPA.
[3]
For
the reasons that follow, I have concluded that:
(i)
The potential adverse impacts that HFN submits the CCFIPPA may have on its asserted
Aboriginal rights, due to changes that the CCFIPPA may bring about to the legal
framework applicable to land and resource regulation in Canada, are non-appreciable and speculative in nature. I also find that HFN has not
established the requisite causal link between those alleged potential adverse
impacts and the CCFIPPA.
(ii)
The same is true with respect to the potential adverse impacts that HFN submits
the CCFIPPA may have on the scope of self government which it can achieve.
(iii)
Therefore, the ratification of the CCFIPPA by the Government of Canada [Canada] without engaging in consultations with HFN would not contravene the principle of the honour
of the Crown or Canada’s duty to consult HFN before taking any action that may
adversely impact upon its asserted Aboriginal rights.
[4]
This
application will therefore be dismissed.
I. The
CCFIPPA
[5]
The
CCFIPPA was signed at Vladivostok, Russia, on September 9, 2012.
[6]
Pursuant
to Article 35, Canada and the Government of the People’s Republic of China [the “Contracting Parties”] are required to notify each other through diplomatic
channels that they have completed the internal legal procedures for the entry
into force of their agreement. The CCFIPPA will enter into force on the first
day of the month following the month in which the second of the two
notifications is received and shall remain in force for a period of at least 15
years.
[7]
After
the expiration of the initial 15-year period, either party may terminate the
CCFIPPA. Such termination will be effective one year after its receipt by the other
Contracting Party. However, the agreement will continue to be effective for an
additional 15-year period with respect to investments made prior to its
termination.
[8]
It
appears to be common ground between the parties to this proceeding [Parties] that
the substantive provisions in the CCFIPPA are highly similar to those in the North
American Free Trade Agreement Between the Government of Canada, the
Government of Mexico and the Government of the United States, 17 December
1992, Can TS 1994 No 2, 32 ILM 289 (entered into force 1 January 1994) [NAFTA]
and closely resemble the provisions in Canada’s 2004 Model Foreign Investment
Protection Agreement [2004 Model FIPA]. Indeed, HFN acknowledged that the
provisions in the CCFIPPA that were the focus of this proceeding “are the same
as those set out in NAFTA” (Reply of the Applicant [Reply] at para 33).
[9]
According
to the Explanatory Memorandum on the [CCFIPPA] [Explanatory Memorandum],
the CCFIPPA:
[…] is a bilateral
treaty designed to protect and promote investment between Canada and the People’s Republic of China (the “Parties”) by assigning legally binding rights and
obligations to both Parties in foreign investment matters.
The Agreement provides Canadian investors operating in the
People’s Republic of China with additional legal protection, setting out the
manner in which Canadian investors should be treated and procedures through
which they may pursue alleged breaches of the Agreement. Key provisions
include: national treatment, most-favoured nation treatment, minimum standard
of treatment, protection against expropriation, obligations for the free
transfer of funds and an investor-State dispute settlement mechanism.
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[…]
est un traité bilatéral conçu pour protéger et promouvoir les investissements
entre le Canada et la République populaire de Chine (les « Parties »), qui
définit des droits et des obligations juridiquement contraignants pour les
deux parties en matière d’investissements étrangers.
L’Accord
prévoit une protection juridique additionnelle pour les investisseurs
canadiens faisant des affaires en République populaire de Chine, établit la
manière dont doivent être traités les investisseurs canadiens et énonce les
procédures visant les mesures que peuvent prendre ces investisseurs
relativement aux violations alléguées de l’Accord. Les principales
dispositions de l’Accord comprennent : le traitement national, le
traitement de la nation la plus favorisée, la norme minimale de traitement,
la protection contre l’expropriation, les obligations relatives au libre
transfert de fonds et un mécanisme de règlement des différends opposant un
investisseur et un État.
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[10]
The
CCFIPPA provides the same protections described above to investors of the
People’s Republic of China [China].
[11]
The
Explanatory Memorandum also notes that “[c]onsultations on the [CCFIPPA] took
place under the ongoing consultation process by the Department of Foreign
Affairs and International Trade with stakeholders.”
[12]
It
is common ground between the Parties that such consultations did not include
the HFN or other First Nations, notwithstanding that Canada released an initial
Environmental Assessment of the CCFIPPA for public comment in February 2008.
[13]
Shortly
following the announcement of the signing of the CCFIPPA, HFN wrote to Prime
Minister Harper to request that the ratification of the agreement be postponed
“until there has been full and proper consultation between the Crown and the
founding First Nations, including [HFN].” Representatives of other First
Nations have made similar requests. To date, HFN’s request has not been
granted. It appears that the same is true with respect to the requests that
have been made on behalf of other First Nations.
[14]
No
legislative amendments are required to implement the CCFIPPA.
[15]
The
CCFIPPA is similar in many respects to 24 other foreign investment protection
agreements [FIPAs] that Canada has entered into since 1989, particularly those
entered into since 1995 (Affidavit of Vernon MacKay, [MacKay Affidavit],
Respondent’s Record, Volume I, Tab 1, at paras 20 - 31 and 39 - 44).
II. The HFN
[16]
The
HFN, formerly known as the Opetchesaht Indian Band, is a “band” within the
meaning of that term as defined in the Indian Act, RSC, 1985, c I-5 [Indian
Act]. The Hupacasath Chief and Council represent approximately 285 band
members, all of whom are Indians as defined in the Indian Act.
[17]
According
to an affidavit sworn by Carolyne Sayers [Sayers Affidavit], a Council member
of the HFN, the HFN’s band members live on two reserves near Port Alberni on Vancouver Island. It appears that those reserves are located on the banks of the Alberni Inlet,
and are approximately 53.4 and 2.6 hectares, respectively, in size. The HFN has
three additional reserves in that territory which are not occupied, due to the
lack of infrastructure. In total, the HFN asserts Aboriginal rights and title
with respect to approximately 232,000 hectares of land in central Vancouver Island, as reflected on the map set forth in Appendix 1 to these reasons.
[18]
In
her affidavit, which was authorized by, and sworn on behalf of, the HFN’s Chief
and Council, Ms. Sayers stated that she is concerned that if the CCFIPPA is
ratified and implemented the HFN will be negatively affected in a number of
ways, including:
a. HFN may
be prevented from exercising its rights to conserve, manage and protect lands,
resources and habitats in accordance with traditional Hupacasath laws, customs
and practices, and in the best interest of its members;
b. HFN
may be prevented from negotiating a treaty which protects its rights to exercise
its authority in the best interest of the Hupacasath people, including to
conserve, manage and protect lands, resources and habitats and to engage in
other governance activities, in accordance with traditional Hupacasath law,
customs and practices, and in the best interest of its members;
c. disputes
over resource use between HFN and companies with Chinese investors will be
resolved by the application of international trade and investment law, which
Ms. Sayers believes does not provide the same protections for Aboriginal rights
and title as Canadian constitutional law;
d. because
measures aimed at protecting HFN’s rights and title may give rise to
significant damage claims, the federal and provincial governments will be less
likely to take steps to protect those rights, including engaging in adequate consultation
and reasonable accommodation; and
e. the
rights of Chinese investors, and the impact of any potential claim under the CCFIPPA
on Canada may be taken into account by the government and courts in determining
whether a specific measure HFN seeks to protect its rights and title would
constitute reasonable accommodation.
III.
Issue
[19]
In
its Application, HFN sought:
a. A
declaration that Canada is required to engage in a process of consultation and
accommodation with First Nations, including HFN, prior to taking steps that
will bind Canada under the CCFIPPA;
b. An
order restraining the Minister of Foreign Affaires or any other official or
representative of Canada from sending a letter to the People’s Republic of
China [China] stating that Canada has completed the internal legal procedures
for the entry into force of the CCPIFFA, until the appropriate consultation and
accommodation has been carried out; and
c. An
interlocutory injunction restraining the Minister of Foreign Affairs or any
other official or representative of Canada from sending a letter to China stating that Canada has completed the internal legal procedures for the entry into force of the
CCFIPPA, until this application has been heard and determined by the Court.
[20]
In
their written submissions, the Respondents stated that if this Court finds that
a duty to consult with HFN has been triggered and breached, it would not be
necessary for the Court to go beyond making a declaration that a such a duty is
owed to HFN, “as it can be assumed that the government will comply with the law
as stated by the courts.”
[21]
Based
on that statement, HFN withdrew its request for the relief described in
subparagraphs 19(b) and (c) above.
[22]
The
Respondents also submitted that any declaration that this Court may issue
should be confined to addressing the asserted duty to consult with HFN, and
should not address whether a duty to consult is owed to other First Nations. I
agree.
[23]
As
the Respondents noted, HFN did not commence a class action or bring a
representative action on behalf of other First Nations. It also did not serve
notice on all First Nations so that they could be added as parties. No other
First Nations sought to be added as a party to this proceeding.
[24]
In
these circumstances, I agree that it would not be appropriate for this Court to
address, in any declaration that may be made in this proceeding, the issue of
whether a duty to consult is owed to other First Nations, even if the
formidable practical impediments to workable and meaningful consultations with
the over 600 First Nations bands that exist across the country could be
overcome. My conclusion in this regard is reinforced by the fact that
Aboriginal rights are both band and fact-specific (R v Gladstone, [1996]
2 SCR 723, at para 65 and R v Van der Peet, [1996] 2 S.C.R. 507, at para
69); and representatives of Aboriginal groups need to be authorized to speak or
to bring claims on behalf of their groups (Sechelt Nation v Bell Pole, 2013 BCSC 892 (QL), at para 17). Moreover, with
one exception, no evidence has been led on behalf of other First Nations
regarding the potential impact of the CCFIPPA on their Aboriginal interests.
[25]
In
its initial written submissions, HFN raised a threshold issue of whether the
act of ratifying the CCFIPPA is something that could be subject to judicial
review. HFN maintains that ratification of the CCFIPPA is subject to review on
the basis that Canada’s failure to consult HFN prior to ratification is a
breach of its constitutional duty to consult with HFN in respect of a measure
that may affect HFN’s Aboriginal rights. That said, during the hearing, HFN
underscored that it was not suggesting that the Court can review either Canada’s prerogative to enter into the CCFIPPA or the content of the CCFIPPA. HFN
acknowledges that these are matters of “high policy” that are not amenable to
judicial review (Black v Canada (Prime Minister) (2001), 54 OR (3d) 215,
at para 52). The Respondents have not contested this threshold issue.
Indeed, it is clear that the exercise of the prerogative power of the Crown can
be reviewed for constitutionality (Canada (Prime Minister) v Khadr,
2010 SCC 3, at paras 36-37; Black, above, at para 50).
[26]
Accordingly,
the only issue to be determined in this application is whether, prior to
ratifying the CCFIPPA in accordance with Article 33 of the CCFIPPA, Canada has a duty to consult with HFN.
IV.
Standard
of Review
[27]
The
ratification the CCFIPPA is an exercise of a prerogative power. It is common
ground between the Parties that the exercise of this power is subject to review
on constitutional grounds. In this proceeding, HFN submits that Canada’s failure to consult with HFN prior to ratifying the CCFIPPA would constitute a breach of Canada’s constitutional obligation to engage in consultations with HFN before taking any
action which may adversely affect HFN. It also asserts that such action would
be contrary to Canada’s constitutional obligation to act honourably in all its
dealings with Aboriginal peoples (Tzeachten First Nation v Canada (Attorney
General) 2007 BCCA 133, at paras 47-49; Nlaka’pamux Nation Tribunal
Council v British Columbia (Project Assessment Director, Environmental
Assessment Office), 2011 BCCA 78, at para 68).
[28]
Given
the constitutional nature of this issue, it is subject to review on a standard
of correctness (Dunsmuir
v New Brunswick,
2008 SCC 9, at para 58; Alberta (Information
and Privacy Commissioner) v Alberta Teachers’ Association 2011
SCC 61, at para 30).
V.
Preliminary
Issues
[29]
In
their written submissions, the Respondents requested the Court to strike four
affidavits sworn on behalf of the Applicant by individuals who are not members
of HFN. In the alternative, the Respondents requested that portions of those
affidavits be struck. The Respondents maintain that those affidavits or
portions thereof, are clearly irrelevant.
[30]
The
affidavits in question were sworn by Grand Chief Stewart Phillip, Chief James
Ahnassay, Chief Bryce Williams and Chief Isadore Day.
[31]
The
first three of those affidavits focus primarily upon consultations that were
requested in respect of the CCFIPPA, and the affiants’ concerns regarding the
potential implications of the CCFIPPA on (i) their bands’ Aboriginal interests,
treaty rights and ability to protect the environment in their territories or (ii)
First Nations more generally. Grand Chief Phillip’s affidavit also briefly
discusses the history behind the establishment of the Union of British Columbia
Indian Chiefs and that organization’s principal objectives.
[32]
Chief
Day’s affidavit, written on behalf of the Serpent River First Nation and the
Chiefs of Ontario Organization [COO], also focuses upon the potential
implications of the CCFIPPA on First Nations’ treaty and other rights. In
addition, it provides an overview of the history of relations between First
Nations and the Crown and a more detailed treatment of the concerns of First
Nations than is provided in the other three affidavits mentioned immediately
above.
[33]
Notwithstanding
that Grand Chief Phillip, Chief Ahnassay, Chief Williams and Chief Day are not
authorized to represent HFN, and have focused on the potential impact of the
CCFIPPA on their respective First Nations groups, or on First Nations in
general, I have decided to exercise my discretion in favour of allowing their
affidavits to remain on the Court record. My decision in this regard is based
on my conclusion that those affidavits may potentially assist my understanding
of the potential impact of the CCFIPPA on HFN. In the case of Chief Day’s
affidavit, I consider the history that he provides to be helpful in assisting
me to understand the important context in which the Crown’s legal duty to
consult First Nations arose, particularly as that duty relates to the honour of
the Crown and the objective of reconciliation.
VI. Experts
A. Mr.
Gus Van Harten
[34]
HFN’s
expert evidence was provided by Mr. Gus Van Harten, in a letter dated February
13, 2013 [Van Harten Opinion] to HFN’s counsel.
[35]
Mr.
Van Harten is an Associate Professor at Osgoode Hall Law School, at York University. He obtained his PhD in 2006 and has since published a number of articles,
primarily on investment treaty arbitration. He has also written a book on that
topic.
[36]
Mr.
Van Harten was retained to provide his expert opinion with respect to various
aspects of the CCFIPPA. These include the obligations that it imposes upon
Canada, the manner in which it differs from other international treaties to
which Canada is a party, how it will apply to federal and provincial government
action and legislation, how it will apply to domestic judicial decisions which
affect land and resources subject to Aboriginal or treaty rights claims,
whether principles of domestic law will be taken into account by international
arbitrators who are appointed to adjudicate under the CCFIPPA, and whether
measures or actions taken by First Nations governments could potentially put
Canada out of compliance with the CCFIPPA.
[37]
The
Respondents submitted that Mr. Van Harten’s evidence should be accorded reduced
weight because he has been a vocal critic of the type of investor state
arbitration provisions that are included in the CCFIPPA and because he has
frequently and publicly voiced his opposition to ratification of the CCFIPPA.
[38]
Given
that HFN acknowledged and did not dispute these allegations, I am inclined to
agree with the Respondents’ position, primarily on the basis that Mr. Van
Harten’s ability “to assist the Court impartially,” as required by the Court’s Code
of Conduct for Expert Witnesses, SOR/2010-176, would appear to be somewhat
compromised.
B.
Mr.
J. Christopher Thomas, Q.C.
[39]
The
Respondents’ expert evidence was provided by Mr. Chris Thomas, Q.C. in a letter
dated March 13, 2013 [Thomas Opinion] to counsel to the Respondents.
[40]
Mr.
Thomas is a Senior Principal Research Fellow at the National University of
Singapore’s Center for International Law. He has also practiced in the field of
international economic law for over 25 years, taught at two Canadian
universities, and worked for the Federal Minister for International Trade
during the launch of the Uruguay Round of Multilateral Trade Negotiations and
the Canada-United States Free Trade Agreement negotiations. In
addition, he acted for the Government of Mexico in relation to the
negotiation of the NAFTA and two related agreements on Labour and Environmental
Co-operation. He has also practised as an international trade dispute panellist
and an international arbitrator.
[41]
Mr.
Thomas was retained to provide his views on the Van Harten Opinion, including
its criticism of international investor-state arbitration; the extent to which
the CCFIPPA differs from Canada’s past agreements on investment protection; the
extent to which the CCFIPPA may prevent a government from determining an
appropriate level of environmental protection, from managing its international
resources, or from making changes to its laws; the interaction between the
CCFIPPA and Canadian domestic law; remedies that may be granted by an arbitral
panel constituted under the CCFIPPA; the extent to which Canada can be held
internationally responsible under the CCFIPPA for legislative or judicial
decisions with respect to HFN; and the scope of the Aboriginal affairs’
exception in the CCFIPPA.
C. General
Observations
[42]
Given
Mr. Van Harten’s acknowledged partiality, and given that I generally found Mr.
Thomas to be more neutral, factually rigorous and persuasive, I generally
accepted his evidence over Mr. Van Harten’s when they did not agree. In any
event, I found that Mr. Van Harten’s evidence did not materially assist HFN to
demonstrate that the potential impact of the CCFIPPA on its Aboriginal
interests is appreciable and non-speculative, as required to trigger a duty to
consult. To a large extent, this was due to the fact that his assertions on key
issues were baldly stated and unsubstantiated.
VII.
Analysis
A. Duty to Consult
– General Principles
[43]
The
Government of Canada’s duty to consult with Aboriginal peoples, including HFN,
and to accommodate their interests in certain circumstances is grounded in the
honour of the Crown (Haida Nation v British Columbia (Minister of Forests),
2004 SCC 73, at paras 16 and 20 [Haida]). In brief, “in all its dealings
with Aboriginal peoples, from the assertion of sovereignty to the resolution of
claims and the implementation of treaties, the Crown must act honourably.” This
is necessary to achieve the important goal of “the reconciliation of the
pre-existence of aboriginal societies with the sovereignty of the Crown.” In
turn, to achieve that goal, the principle of the honour of the Crown must be
viewed generously (Haida, above, at para 17). Likewise, the duty to
consult must be approached in a “generous” and “purposive” manner (Rio Tinto
Alcan Inc v Carrier Sekani Tribal Council, 2010 SCC 43, at para 43 [Rio
Tinto].
[44]
The
honour of the Crown gives rise to different duties in different circumstances.
Where, as in the present circumstances with HFN, a treaty with a particular
Aboriginal group remains to be concluded, the honour of the Crown implies a
duty to consult when the conditions described below are met. Moreover, when
those conditions are met, the honour of the Crown further requires that the
Aboriginal group’s relevant interests be reasonably accommodated, if
appropriate (Haida, above, at paras 18, 20, 27 and 33).
[45]
The
Aboriginal interests that are relevant for this purpose are those interests
that are protected by s. 35(1) of the Constitution Act, 1982, which
recognizes and affirms “the existing aboriginal and treaty rights of the
aboriginal peoples of Canada” (Hiawatha First Nation v Ontario (Minister of
Environment), [2007] OJ No 406, at para 50). For greater certainty,
subsection 35(3) clarifies that, for this purpose, “treaty rights” includes
“rights that now exist by way of land claims agreements or may be so
acquired.”
[46]
Given
the constitutional dimension of the honour of the Crown, the duty to consult is
a “constitutional imperative” (Nlaka’pamux Nation Tribal Council v British Columbia (Project Assessment Director, Environmental Assessment Office), 2011
BCCA 78, at para 68). It seeks to provide protection to Aboriginal and treaty
rights while furthering the goals of reconciliation between Aboriginal peoples
and the Crown (Rio Tinto, above, at para 34; Manitoba Metis
Federation Inc v Canada (Attorney General), 2013 SCC 14, at para 66).
[47]
Once
triggered, the content of the duty to consult and accommodate varies with the
circumstances. The jurisprudence in this area continues to evolve. However, in
general terms “the scope of the duty is proportionate to a preliminary
assessment of the strength of the case supporting the existence of the right or
title, and the seriousness of the potentially adverse effect upon the right or
title claimed” (Haida, above, at para 39).
[48]
The
present case solely concerns whether the preconditions that must be met to
trigger a duty to consult were met. It does not concern the content of that
duty, if the duty exists in respect of the ratification of the CCFIPPA.
[49]
In
Haida, above, at paragraph 34, the Supreme Court stated that the duty to
consult “arises when the Crown has knowledge, real or constructive, of the
potential existence of the Aboriginal right or title and contemplates conduct
that might adversely affect it.”
[50]
In
Rio Tinto, above, at para 31, the Court elaborated on this test as
follows:
[31]
… This test can be broken down into three elements: (1) the Crown’s knowledge,
actual or constructive, of a potential Aboriginal claim or right; (2)
contemplated Crown conduct; and (3) the potential that the contemplated conduct
may adversely affect an Aboriginal claim or right.
[51]
I
will address each of these three elements of the test separately below.
Although HFN also briefly stated in its Application that Canada’s duty to
consult also arises from the Crown’s fiduciary obligations towards First
Nations Peoples and the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of
Indigenous Peoples, Resolution 61/295, 13 September 2007, I agree with the
Respondents that the question of whether the alleged duty to consult is owed to
HFN must be determined solely by application of the test set forth immediately
above. I would add in passing that HFN did not pursue these assertions in
either written or oral argument, and that, in a press release issued by
Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada, entitled Canada’s
Statement of Support on the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of
Indigenous Peoples, that Declaration is described as “an aspirational
document” and as “a non-legally binding document that does not reflect
customary international law nor change Canadian laws.” HFN did not make
submissions or lead evidence to the contrary.
B.
The Crown’s Knowledge of HFN’s Claims or Rights
[52]
It
is common ground between the Parties that this element of the test is
satisfied.
[53]
In
her affidavit, Ms. Sayers characterized HFN’s asserted Aboriginal rights as
including the following:
a. The right to harvest,
manage, protect and use fish, wildlife, and other resources in HFN’s
traditional territory in priority to all other users, subject only to
conservation;
b. Rights to the
commercial sale of fish, wildlife and other resources to earn a livelihood;
c. The right to have
access to exclusive and preferred areas to harvest or use fish, wildlife and
other resources in their traditional territory;
d. The right to protect
the habitats that sustain fish, wildlife and other resources which the
Hupacasath have a right to harvest;
e. The right to harvest,
use and conserve fish, wildlife and other resources and to protect and manage
the habitat of fish, wildlife and other resources in accordance with traditional
Hupacasath laws, customs, and practices both in their traditional and their
modern form; and
f. The right to build,
maintain and occupy structures incidental to harvesting, using, managing or
conserving fish, wildlife and other resources in HFN’s territory.
[54]
The
Respondents confirmed that they are aware that the foregoing Aboriginal rights
have been advanced by HFN, both in treaty negotiations and in litigation. As
is immediately apparent, those rights essentially relate to the use, management
and conservation of land and resources within HFN’s claimed territory. The
Respondents acknowledge that those rights are rooted in section 35 of the Constitution.
It is those rights, and those rights alone, that are relevant for the analysis
below.
C. The
Contemplated Crown Conduct
[55]
It
is common ground between the parties that the contemplated Crown conduct in
question is the ratification of the CCFIPPA.
D. The Potential That The Contemplated
Conduct May Adversely Affect HFN’s Asserted Aboriginal Rights
[56]
In
assessing whether this third element of the duty to consult test is met, it is
critical to determine “the degree to which the conduct contemplated by the
Crown would adversely affect” the asserted Aboriginal rights (Mikisew Cree
First Nation v Canada (Minister of Canadian Heritage), 2005 SCC 69, at para
34 [Mikisew]). While a generous and purposive approach to this element
is required, “[m]ere speculative impacts” will not suffice. There must be “an
appreciable adverse effect on the First Nations’ ability to exercise their
aboriginal right” (Rio Tinto, above, at para 46). Moreover, the claimant
“must show a causal relationship between the proposed government conduct or
decision and a potential for adverse impacts on pending Aboriginal claims or
rights” (Rio Tinto, above, at para 45).
[57]
In
this regard, adverse impacts extend to any effect that may prejudice a pending
Aboriginal claim or right. This includes high-level management decisions or
structural changes to the management of a resource that may adversely affect
Aboriginal claims or rights, even if such decisions have no immediate impact on
the resource or the land upon which it is situated (Rio Tinto, above, at
para 47), and even if later opportunities for consultations exist in respect of
specific actions that may be taken pursuant to such high level decisions or
structural changes (Dene Tha’ First Nation v
British Columbia (Minister of Energy and Mines), 2013 BCSC 977,
at para 114).
[58]
HFN
submits that the ratification of the CCFIPPA is such a high-level management
decision or structural change and has a non-speculative potential to adversely
affect its asserted Aboriginal rights in an appreciable way, even if it will
have no immediate impact on its lands or the resources situated thereon. In
this regard, HFN adds that Canada’s agreement to be bound by the CCFIPPA “may
set the stage for further decisions that will have a direct adverse impact on
land and resources” (Rio Tinto, above, at para 47), by granting Chinese
investors enforceable rights which must be taken into account when any level of
government in Canada makes any kind of resource management decision.
[59]
For
the reasons set forth below, I respectfully disagree. In my view, the evidence
adduced during this proceeding does not demonstrate that any adverse impacts
that the CCFIPPA may have upon HFN’s asserted Aboriginal interests will be
appreciable and non-speculative. On the contrary, I am satisfied that the
adverse impacts which HFN has identified are speculative, remote and
non-appreciable. In addition, HFN has not demonstrated the required causal link
between the CCFIPPA and those claimed potential adverse impacts.
[60]
HFN
submitted that the ratification of the CCFIPPA is likely to give rise to the
following two general categories of adverse effects:
a. The
CCFIPPA will result in a significant change in the legal framework applicable
to land and resource regulation in Canada, and that various potential adverse
effects on its Aboriginal rights will flow from that change.
b. The
rights granted to Chinese investors under the CCFIPPA will directly and
adversely impact the scope of self-government which HFN can achieve, either
through the exercise of its Aboriginal rights, through the treaty making
process, or through the exercise of delegated authority from Canada or the Government of British Columbia.
[61]
I
will address these two broad categories of claimed adverse effects separately
below. However, I will first address a threshold issue raised by the Respondents.
(i) Can it be said that the CCFIPPA
cannot, as a matter of law, trigger a duty to consult?
[62]
The
Respondents submit that the ratification of the CCFIPPA cannot, as a matter of
law, trigger a duty to consult with HFN. This position is based primarily on
its assertions that (i) the ratification of the CCFIPPA will not alter Canadian
domestic law or require existing laws or regulations to be changed, and (ii)
the authority of arbitral tribunals established under the CCFIPPA will not
extend into the domestic sphere. In this latter regard, the Respondents note
that the remedial powers of such tribunals will be restricted by the CCFIPPA to
awarding monetary damages or restitution of property, solely against Canada and China. As a result, in the event a measure passed by HFN were found by an arbitral
tribunal to be in breach of Canada’s obligations under the CCFIPPA, the
tribunal would have no power to enjoin the measure and it would be Canada, not
HFN, that would be responsible for paying damages or providing restitution. Put
differently, any awards issued by arbitral panels under the CCFIPPA will have
no binding effect upon HFN.
[63]
In
support of their position, the Respondents rely upon Council of Canadians v Canada (Attorney General) [2005] OJ No 3422 [Council of Canadians – OSCJ]; aff’d
[2006] OJ No 4751 [Council of Canadians – ONCA]. There, the Ontario
Court of Appeal upheld a finding of first instance that the fact that the
arbitral tribunals set up under Chapter 11 of the NAFTA have not been
incorporated into Canada’s domestic law negated one possible basis for applying
section 96 of the Constitution to those tribunals (Council of
Canadians – ONCA, above, at para 25). However, the Court then declined to
address the broader question of whether a tribunal established pursuant to an
international treaty is per se exempt from section 96, because it was
satisfied that the NAFTA tribunals do not violate section 96.
[64]
Section
96 of the Constitution states:
The Governor General shall appoint the Judges of the Superior, District, and County Courts in each Province, except those of the Courts of
Probate in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick.
|
Le
gouverneur-général nommera les juges des cours supérieures, de district et de
comté dans chaque province, sauf ceux des cours de vérification dans la
Nouvelle-Écosse et le Nouveau-Brunswick.
|
[65]
In
the course of its reasons, the Court of Appeal observed that although this
provision is “framed as an appointing power accorded to the federal government,
it is now well established that section 96 was designed to ensure the
independence of the judiciary and to provide some uniformity to the judicial
system throughout the country” (Council of Canadians – ONCA, above, at
para 31).
[66]
In
reaching the conclusion that Chapter 11 of the NAFTA had not been incorporated
into Canada’s domestic law, the applications judge observed that international
law, which governs NAFTA tribunals, and domestic law, operate in different
spheres (Council of Canadians – OSCJ, above, at para 41). She then
proceeded to conclude that the establishment of tribunals under NAFTA cannot
breach the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, Part I of the Constitution
Act, 1982, being Schedule B to the Canada Act 1982 (UK), 1982, c 11
[Charter], because (i) those tribunals have no authority to change Canada’s
domestic laws or practices, (ii) their jurisdiction is limited to the
international law issues before them and the remedies are also circumscribed,
(iii) nothing in the NAFTA compels Canada to amend its laws and practices, and
(iv) the arbitration of claims that Canada has failed to honour its treaty
obligations does not affect or determine the rights of Canadians (Council of
Canadians – OSCJ, above, at para 65).
[67]
The
Respondents rely on the foregoing reasoning to assert that the CCFIPPA cannot,
as a matter of law, trigger the constitutional duty to consult.
[68]
In
my view, the fact that the arbitration provisions in the NAFTA, or similar
provisions in other FIPAs, may not attract section 96 of the Constitution or
breach the Charter does not preclude the possibility that the ratification
of such agreements may trigger the application of the constitutional principle
of the honour of the Crown and a duty to consult with First Nations prior to
such ratification. One reason why this is so is that the duty to consult is
triggered where there is simply a non-speculative possibility of appreciable
impacts on asserted Aboriginal rights, whereas Charter rights are only
triggered when there is a more serious risk that the alleged violation will
occur (Phillips v Nova Scotia (Westray Mine Inquiry), [1995] 2 S.C.R. 97,
at para 108; Council of Canadians – OSCJ, above, at para 62). Absent
other legal considerations that have not been addressed in this proceeding, the
question may need to be determined on the basis of the facts and evidence in
each case, namely, whether they establish the three elements required to
trigger the duty to consult. In any event, given the conclusions that I have
reached below regarding the facts and evidence in this case, it is not
necessary to make a definitive determination on the Respondents’ position that
the CCFIPPA cannot, as a matter of law, trigger the duty to consult.
[69]
However,
I will note in passing that the Respondents’ position on this point is
inconsistent with provisions that are included in a number of final agreements
that Canada has entered into with First Nations, which require it to consult
with those First Nations prior to consenting to be bound by a new international
treaty which would give rise to new international legal obligations that may
adversely affect a right of the First Nations. (See for example Maa-nulth
First Nations Final Agreement, December 9, 2006, at para 1.7.1; Lheidli
Final Agreement, October 29, 2006, at para 11; Tla’amin Final Agreement,
at para 24; Yale First Nation Final Agreement, at para 2.8.1; and Tsawwassen
Final Agreement, clauses 30 and 31 in Chapter 2; see also Land Claims
and Self Government Agreement Among The Tlicho and The Government of the
Northwest Territories and The Government of Canada, at para 7.13.2).
(ii) Effects flowing from a change in the
legal framework applicable to land and resource regulation
[70]
HFN
submits that the ratification of the CCFIPPA triggers the duty to consult
because it grants Chinese investors new, substantive, and enforceable rights
with respect to any investments they may hold, or maintain, in areas over which
HFN asserts Aboriginal or treaty rights. HFN maintains that this constitutes a
significant change in the legal landscape pertaining to its lands and resources
because, among other things, those rights necessarily involve a restriction of
the options open to the Crown to address HFN’s asserted Aboriginal and treaty
claims, and to protect the resources which are the subject of those claims.
[71]
It
is common ground between the Parties that there does not appear to have been a
previous case in which the Courts in Canada have been called upon to assess
whether a duty to consult exists in respect of any other investment treaty or
similar international agreement.
a. Duty
to consult jurisprudence relied upon by HFN
[72]
In
support of its assertion that ratification of the CCFIPPA would constitute a
high-level management decision or structural change that has an appreciable and
non-speculative potential to adversely affect its asserted Aboriginal rights,
HFN relies on a line of cases in which a duty to consult was found to exist in
respect of conduct that was found to meet this test.
[73]
I
agree with the Respondents that those cases are all distinguishable on the
basis that the high-level decisions or structural changes in each of those
cases all directly related to land or resources in respect of which Aboriginal
peoples have asserted or established Aboriginal rights. By contrast, the
CCFIPPA is a broad, national framework investment treaty that does not directly
relate to any particular lands or resources. Rather than being directly
or even broadly related to land or resources, it is designed to protect and
promote investment between Canada and China by ensuring basic legally binding
rights and obligations to investors of both Contracting Parties.
[74]
In
Hupacasath First Nation v British Columbia (Minister of Forests), 2005
BCSC 1712 [Hupacasath], the Crown conduct which gave rise to the duty to
consult was the removal of certain lands from a tree farm license [TFL] within
claimed HFN territory. It was determined that the removal of those lands from
the TFL had the potential to result in a lower level of possible government
intervention in the activities on the land than existed under the TFL regime.
Justice Lynn Smith elaborated as follows at paragraph 223:
There is a reduced level of forestry management and a lesser
degree of environmental over-sight. Access to the land by the Hupacasath becomes,
in practical terms, less secure because of the withdrawal of the Crown from the
picture. There will possibly be increased pressure on the resources on the
Crown land in the TFL as a result of the withdrawal of the Removed Lands. The
lands may now be developed and resold.
[75]
Justice
Smith added, among other things, that by agreeing to the removal of the lands
in question from the TFL, “the Crown decided to relinquish control over the
activities on the land, control that permitted a degree of protection of
potential aboriginal rights over and above that which flows from the continued
application of federal and provincial legislation” (Hupacasath, above,
at para 225). As further explained in the reasons below, no similar
relinquishment of control or non-speculative attenuation of the Crown’s ability
to protect HFN’s asserted Aboriginal rights will occur as a result of the
ratification of the CCFIPPA.
[76]
In
Gitxsan First Nation v British Columbia (Minister of Forests), 2002 BCSC
1701, Justice Tysoe found that the Minister of Forests’ consent to a change in
corporate control of a company which held a TFL gave rise to a duty to
consult. In reaching that conclusion, Justice Tysoe found that the change in
the controlling mind of the company, as well as the fact that the effect of the
change in control was to protect the company from bankruptcy, gave rise to a
non-speculative potential for an adverse effect on the First Nation applicant’s
Aboriginal rights and title. This was in part due to the fact that the
philosophy of the persons making the decisions associated with the licenses may
have changed. In addition, any sale by a trustee in bankruptcy (in the absence
of such a change in control) would have required the Minister’s consent, and he
would have been required to consult with the applicants before giving such
consent. Once again, ratification of the CCFIPPA has no similar non-speculative
potential to adversely impact upon any of the lands or resources over which HFN
has asserted Aboriginal rights.
[77]
Likewise,
the Crown conduct at issue in the other duty to consult cases relied upon by
HFN also directly concerned the applicant First Nations’ claimed lands or
specific resources on those lands. For example:
•
In
Huu-Ay-Aht First Nation v The Minister of Forests, 2005 BCSC 697, the
Crown conduct was a forest and range revitalization policy which, among other
things, took back 20% of the annual allowable cut from major replaceable forest
licenses and tree farm licenses throughout the province, and allocated back to
First Nations some of what was taken, based upon a formula that was rejected by
the applicants. The Crown unsuccessfully argued that a duty to consult did not
arise until a future point in time at which decisions to grant or renew
specific licenses on specific parcels of land occurred.
•
In
Dene Tha’ First Nation v Canada (Minister of Environment), 2006 FC 1354,
the Crown conduct at issue was the design of an oversight mechanism, or
blueprint, for the construction of the Mackenzie Gas Pipeline [MGP], from which
all ensuing environmental and review processes would flow. That mechanism, or
Cooperation Plan, conferred no rights, but established the means by which
future activities in relation to the MGP, which ran through the applicant’s
territory, would be managed.
•
In
Kwicksutaineuk Ah-Kwa-Mish First Nation v Canada (Attorney General),
2012 FC 517, the Crown conduct at issue was the re-issuance of finfish
aquaculture licenses in the applicant’s territories by the federal government
following the assumption of this jurisdiction from the provincial government.
The applicant sought consultation because it was concerned that the licences
authorizing aquaculture at particular farm sites posed significant risks to the
health of nearby wild fisheries, upon which the exercise of their Aboriginal
fishing rights depended.
•
In
Squamish Indian Band v British Columbia (Minister of Sustainable Resource
Management), 2004 BCSC 1320 [Squamish], the Crown conduct at issue
was a decision to allow a change in the control and expansion of a proposed ski
and golf resort, on lands over which the applicant claimed Aboriginal rights
and title. In the course of finding that a duty to consult existed, the Court
characterized the practical implications of the decision to allow a change in
control as having been “dramatic” (Squamish, above, at para 78).
[78]
The
foregoing cases all involved Crown conduct which directly concerned the
applicant First Nation’s claimed territories or the resources situated upon
those territories. They are all distinguishable from the ratification of the
CCFIPPA, because the CCFIPPA does not address any specific lands, potential
projects involving specific lands, or specific resources. It is simply a broad,
national, framework agreement that provides additional legal protections to
Chinese investors in Canada, and Canadian investors in China, which parallel the rights provided in several existing investment protection and trade
agreements to which Canada is already a party.
b.
Potential
adverse effects identified by HFN
[79]
Nevertheless,
it remains important to consider each of the principal adverse impacts on its
Aboriginal rights that HFN alleges may result from the ratification of the
CCFIPPA. For the reasons set forth below, I have concluded that each of those
claimed impacts are speculative and non-appreciable. In the absence of more specific
asserted interests that may be adversely impacted and more specific measures
that may be found to contravene the CCFIPPA, it is also difficult to ascertain
the required causal link between the CCFIPPA and a potential adverse impact on
HFN’s asserted Aboriginal interests.
[80]
It
is common ground between the Parties that the jurisprudence on what is or is
not a speculative or non-appreciable impact is not well developed.
[81]
HFN’s
principal concern appears to be the possibility that the rights conferred upon
Chinese investors under the CCFIPPA may be used to challenge or discourage
measures which would have the effect of preserving lands and resources that are
the subject of its asserted Aboriginal claims. Stated differently, HFN submits
that the CCFIPPA may oblige or lead Canada to refrain from taking certain types
of measures which would otherwise have been open to it to address conflicts
that may develop between Chinese investors and HFN, for example, if HFN takes
action to protect its lands and resources for the future.
[82]
With
respect to the potential “chilling effect” of the CCFIPPA on the government,
HFN asserts that even the spectre of potentially substantial awards that may be
issued by arbitral panels in favour of Chinese investors may well factor into Canada’s
analysis of whether to proceed with a proposed measure to protect HFN’s
asserted Aboriginal rights. In this regard, HFN placed significant weight on
evidence provided by Mr. MacKay, Acting Director, Investment Trade Policy
Division, Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade [DFAIT]. In
cross-examination, Mr. MacKay confirmed that, when developing regulatory or
other policy initiatives, including measures that may be taken to accommodate
Aboriginal peoples, the responsible government department is strongly advised
to consult with the government’s Trade Law Bureau to ensure that the
obligations or measures in question are consistent with Canada’s international
trade and investment obligations (Cross-Examination on Affidavit of Vernon John MacKay, April 3, 2013 [MacKay Cross], Applicant’s Record, Volume II, at pp 482-83 and 537).
[83]
Given
the foregoing, HFN further maintains that ratification of the CCFIPPA will
significantly change the equation for the balancing exercise that the Crown is
required to conduct where accommodation is required in making decisions that
may adversely affect HFN’s asserted Aboriginal interests. As a result, HFN
states that those interests will be less likely to receive the protection which
is currently required in order to maintain the honour of the Crown. For
example, if HFN’s preferred form of accommodation would expose Canada to significant potential liability to one or more Chinese investors, this may be a factor in Canada’s determination of whether such a measure is reasonable.
[84]
In
support of its positions, HFN relied primarily upon the experience to date
under the NAFTA, the international experience with agreements providing for
investor-state arbitration, and the ongoing uncertainty regarding how arbitral
panels are likely to assess claims under the CCFIPPA. However, HFN also
encouraged the Court to look beyond the experience to date under NAFTA and
other international trade and investment agreements, because that experience
has been limited and continues to evolve. HFN also dismissed Canada’s experience under the approximately 24 bilateral investment protection treaties that are
currently in force, on the basis that, in most cases, the other party to the
treaty has little investment in Canada. In contrast, HFN noted that Chinese
investment in Canada increased from approximately $228 million in 2003 to over
$12 billion in 2009, prior to the acquisition earlier this year of Nexen Inc.
by CNOOC Ltd., a Chinese state-owned oil company, in a transaction valued at
approximately $15 billion. HFN attaches further significance to the fact that
much of the investment in Canada by Chinese entities to date has been by
enterprises having links to the Chinese government, which HFN contends has been
reported to have a strong, centralized interest in securing natural resources
in Canada and elsewhere.
[85]
With
respect to the NAFTA, HFN notes that it is the only other international trade
or investment agreement with investor-state arbitration provisions, under which
Canada hosts a significant level of foreign investment. HFN observes that
most of the obligations in the CCFIPPA are the same as those set out in the
NAFTA, and that as a result of its experience under the NAFTA, Canada ranks
sixth on a list of 90 countries published by the United Nations Conference on
Trade and Development in 2012, in terms of claims made by foreign investors
against governments. HFN further observes that whereas the NAFTA can be
terminated at any time by any of its three signatories with one year’s notice, the
CCFIPPA has a minimum period of 15 years and its protection for investments
existing at the end of that period will extend for a further 15 years.
[86]
With
respect to legal uncertainty, HFN makes two general points. First, it notes
that the arbitrators who will be appointed to adjudicated claims brought under
the CCFIPPA are not judges and are not provided with the hallmarks of judicial
independence, such as security of tenure and financial security. It notes that
Mr. Van Harten provided evidence, which does not appear to be disputed, that
many arbitrators work as counsel while also working as arbitrators. Second, it
notes that there is a significant level of uncertainty regarding how important
provisions in the CCFIPPA will be applied. This will be discussed further
below. In general, it states that arbitrators’ decisions under the CCFIPPA will
be subject to judicial review on a very limited basis, and that to date,
judicial reviews of decisions by tribunals constituted under the NAFTA have
been dismissed in their entirety, with one exception (Metalclad Corporation
v The United Mexican States, (August 30, 2000), ICSID Case No. ARB (AF)/97/1),
where a portion of the award was set aside.
[87]
HFN
acknowledges that arbitral awards under the CCFIPPA can only be made against,
and bind, the parties to the CCFIPPA, i.e., China and Canada, pursuant to Article 32 of the CCFIPPA. Specifically, it acknowledges that an
arbitral panel would have no power to invalidate a measure that may be adopted
by HFN or Canada to protect HFN’s asserted interests. It also acknowledges the
possibility that the parties to the CCFIPPA may choose to simply pay damage
awards and maintain regulations or other measures that have been found to
contravene the CCFIPPA. However, based on terms that are contained in various
Final Agreements that the Government of Canada has entered into with First
Nations, it asserts that it is likely that HFN will be required to remedy any
measures that it may implement (assuming that it eventually enters into a Final
Agreement containing similar terms), if those measures are found to contravene
the CCFIPPA. HFN maintains that Canada is not likely to maintain any such
measures in the face of such a finding.
[88]
In
addition to the foregoing general submissions, HFN makes various specific
submissions with respect to Articles 4 and 10 of the CCFIPPA, which deal with
the minimum standard of treatment to be accorded to Chinese investors, and
expropriation, respectively. It appears to be common ground between the Parties
that, based on past experience internationally, if any challenges are brought
by Chinese investors under the CCFIPPA, they are more likely to be based on one
or both of these two provisions than on other provisions. HFN adds that these
are the two provisions that have been most likely to lead to significant awards
under other investment treaties.
[89]
HFN
also made submissions with respect to the scope of certain of the exceptions in
the CCFIPPA, including (i) measures that Canada has reserved the right to adopt
pursuant to Annex B.8, which includes measures denying Chinese investors any
rights or preferences provided to Aboriginal peoples, and (ii) environmental
measures.
[90]
The
Parties’ submissions with respect to the provisions in the CCFIPPA pertaining
to minimum standard of treatment [MST], expropriation and exceptions are
discussed separately below.
[91]
However,
before addressing those submissions, I pause to note that, in the absence of a
modern treaty, it appears to be common ground between the Parties that the HFN’s
existing law making powers are limited to the authority provided under sections
81 and 83 of the Indian Act, above. Section 81 authorizes band
councils to make by-laws that are not inconsistent with that legislation or any
regulation made by the Governor in Council or the Minister, regarding various
purposes, including health, traffic, zoning and land use planning, construction
and maintenance of buildings and infrastructure, the protection of wildlife and
gaming. Section 83 provides the authority for band councils to make by-laws,
subject to the Minister’s approval, pertaining to matters such as local
taxation, the licensing of businesses, the appointment of local officials, the
payment of local officials and the raising of money from band members to support
band projects. HFN laws passed pursuant to sections 81 and 83 apply only on HFN
reserves (R v Alfred, [1993] BCJ No 2277, at para 18).
[92]
HFN
also has a Land Use Plan that Ms. Sayers acknowledged is consultative in nature
(Cross-Examination on Affidavit of Carolyne Brenda Sayers [Sayers Cross],
Respondent’s Record, Volume III, at pp. 919 – 921). An important component of
that plan is HFN’s Cedar Access Strategy, which, like the Land Use Plan, HFN
seeks to implement with the consent and cooperation of third parties (Sayers
Cross, at p. 922). It appears to be common ground between the Parties that, as
consultation documents (rather than legal instruments), the Land Use Plan and
the Cedar Access Strategy are not instruments that fall within the potential scope
of the CCFIPPA.
1. Minimum
standard of treatment
[93]
The
provisions with respect to MST are set forth in Article 4 of the CCFIPPA.
Pursuant to Article 4(1), the Contracting Parties are required to “accord to
covered investments fair and equitable treatment and full protection and
security, in accordance with international law.” Pursuant to Article 4(2), the
concepts of “fair and equitable treatment” and “full protection and security”
do not require treatment in addition to or beyond that which is required by the
international MST of aliens, as evidenced by general state practices accepted
as law. It is common ground between the Parties that this latter provision,
which is virtually identical to the language in the Note of Interpretation
issued by the NAFTA Free Trade Commission in 2001 [2001 Interpretation Note]
regarding the MST provisions in Article 1105 of the NAFTA (Thomas Opinion, at
para 102), contemplates the minimum standard of treatment required by customary
international law.
[94]
Apparently
relying largely upon decisions that pre-date the 2001 Interpretation Note, HFN
asserts that “fair and equitable treatment” includes a wide range of procedural
and substantive protections, including a requirement for states to satisfy
legitimate expectations of foreign investors and to maintain a stable legal or
regulatory framework for foreign investors. It adds that this standard would
not allow Canada to defend a challenge based on an argument that the measure in
question was required to fulfill Canada’s constitutional responsibilities under
section 35 of the Constitution. Citing the recent Notice of Intent filed
by Eli Lilly and Company, HFN states that it would even be open to a Chinese
investor to challenge judicial doctrines developed to give effect to section 35,
on the ground that those doctrines give rise to an unstable regulatory
framework for investment. In its Notice of Intent, Eli Lilly challenges the
“promise of the patent” doctrine developed in this Court, and in the Federal
Court of Appeal (Eli Lilly and Company v Canada, NAFTA Ch 11 Panel,
Notice of Intent, 7 November 2012).
[95]
By
contrast, the Respondents took the position that the MST obligation simply
provides for a very low procedural “baseline” below which the treatment of
Chinese investors may not fall. This position was supported by Mr. Thomas,
whose evidence on this point I accept. In this regard, he observed that the MST
obligation in Article 4 “is considered to be a basic standard of treatment that
all members of the international community are capable of meeting” (Thomas
Opinion, at para 119). Citing the recent arbitral panel ruling in Glamis
Gold Corporation v United States of America, NAFTA Ch 11 Panel, Award, 8
June 2009 [Glamis Gold], at para 627, the Respondents described this
standard as:
[…] sufficiently egregious and shocking – a gross denial of
justice, manifest arbitrariness, blatant unfairness, a complete lack of due
process, evident discrimination, or a manifest lack of reasons – so as to fall
below accepted international standards […]
[96]
Based
on Mobil Investments Canada Inc & Murphy Oil Corporation v Canada,
NAFTA Ch 11 Panel, Decision on Liability and on Principles of Quantum, 22 May
2012, at para 153 [Mobil], the Respondents maintain that this standard
does not prohibit regulatory changes even if they have a negative effect on an
investor. In that case, an arbitral panel stated:
Article 1105 [of the NAFTA] may protect an investor from changes
that give rise to an unstable legal and business environment, but only if those
changes may be characterized as arbitrary or grossly unfair or discriminatory,
or otherwise inconsistent with the customary international law standard. In a
complex international and domestic environment, there is nothing in Article
1105 to prevent a public authority from changing the regulatory environment to
take account of new policies and needs, even if some of those changes may have
far-reaching consequences and effects and even if they impose significant
additional burdens on an investor.
[97]
According
to Mr. Thomas, whose evidence I once again accept, the fact that a regulatory
measure may adversely affect an investment, increase the investor’s cost of
doing business, or result in reduced profitability does not, in and of itself,
constitute indirect expropriation (Thomas Opinion, at paras 32 and 131).
[98]
In
support of its position that Chinese investors may rely on the MST provisions
in Article 4 to challenge measures that may be adopted to protect or
accommodate HFN’s asserted interests, and to seek substantial damages claims,
HFN refers to several claims or notices of intent to file claims which have
been made against Canada under NAFTA (e.g., SD Myers, Inc v Government of
Canada, NAFTA Ch 11 Panel, Partial Award, 13 November 2000 [SD Myers]; Windstream
Energy LLC v Government of Canada, NAFTA Ch 11 Panel, Notice of Intent, 17
October 2012; Lone Pine Resources Inc v Government of Canada, NAFTA Ch
11 Panel, Notice of Intent, 8 November 2012; Pope & Talbot Inc v Government
of Canada, NAFTA Ch 11 Panel, Award in Respect of Damages, 31 May 2002 [Pope
& Talbot] as well as claims that have been made against other countries
(e.g., Tecnicas Medioambientales TECMED SA v United Mexican States,
ICSID Case No. ARB (AF)/00/2; Occidental Exploration and Production Company
v Republic of Ecuador, (Final Award, 1 July 2004) LCIA Case No. UN 3467).
[99]
HFN
acknowledges that the above-mentioned 2001 Interpretation Note was issued in
response to the expansive interpretation given to that provision in prior
decisions, particularly Pope & Talbot, above. HFN also acknowledges
that the interpretation of the MST obligation in NAFTA has been incorporated
into the language of Article 4 of the CCFIPPA, as quoted above. However, HFN
maintains that the most-favoured nation [MFN] obligations in Article 5 of the
CCFIPPA may lead an arbitral panel to interpret the MST obligation in the same
“expansive” manner as in Pope & Talbot and other cases that were
decided prior to the adoption of the 2001 Interpretation Note. HFN further
notes that, in the more recent decision of Merrill & Ring Forestry LP v
Canada, ICSID Administrated, Award, 31 March 2010 [Merrill & Ring],
the arbitral panel adopted an interpretation of the MST obligations in NAFTA
that was broader than the interpretation advanced by Canada, and found that the
MST established in customary international law continues to evolve in
accordance with the realities of the international community (Merrill &
Ring, above, at para 193). The arbitral panel proceeded to find that this
standard “provides for the fair and equitable treatment of alien investors
within the confines of reasonableness” (Merrill & Ring, above, at
para 213). Nevertheless, as noted by the Respondents, the arbitral panel then
concluded that regardless of whether the lower standard advocated by the
investor or the higher standard advocated by Canada were adopted, damages had
not been established (Merrill & Ring, above at para 266).
[100] Professor
Van Harten stated in his affidavit that the MFN provisions in Article 5 of the
CCFIPPA would likely be found by an arbitral tribunal to have the effect of
negating the language in Article 4 that incorporates the “customary
international law” standard that was articulated in the above-mentioned 2001
Interpretation Note (Applicants’ Record, at p.85). He appears to base this
belief on the view that there are some bilateral investment treaties that
entered into force subsequent to January 1, 1994 which do not contain that
language, and the limitations that it imports into the MST standard. (Pursuant
to Article 8(1) of the CCFIPPA, the MFN provisions in Article 5 do not apply to
treatment afforded under any bilateral or multilateral agreement in force prior
to January 1, 1994.) However, Mr. Van Harten did not identify any post-1993
trade agreements or FIPAs that contain broader protections for investors than
those set forth in Article 4 of the CCFIPPA.
[101] In
cross-examination, Mr. MacKay acknowledged the possibility that the MFN
provision in Article 5 could potentially negate the language in Article 4 that
was incorporated from the 2001 FTC Interpretation Note. However, he maintained
that the 2001 Interpretation Note simply clarifies the standard that has been
in the NAFTA from the outset, and that is embodied in each of the other
post-1993 international trade agreements and FIPAs to which Canada is a party (Applicants’ Record, at pp 509-510).
[102] Mr.
Thomas did not address this specific issue, although he testified on
cross-examination, in the context of discussing the interpretative note on
expropriation in Annex B.10 of the CCFIPPA, that the specific language of the
substantive provisions in a treaty would likely be given very serious
consideration by an arbitral tribunal, and perhaps ultimately given priority to
the MFN clause (Applicants’ Record, at pp. 769 – 772).
[103] In my
view, the evidence on this point is inconclusive. I accept HFN’s position that
there is some uncertainty as to whether a Chinese investor may be able to
persuade an arbitral tribunal constituted under the CCFIPPA to give it the
benefit of any MST obligation negotiated in another, post-1993 investment
protection treaty, which does not contain the limiting language set forth in
Article 4. However, HFN led no evidence to demonstrate that there is any more
favourable language in the MST provisions of other agreements that are within
the scope of Article 5. As a result, I am left speculating as to whether this
may in fact be the case.
[104] I
also accept HFN’s position that, even without considering the MFN provisions in
Article 5, there is some ongoing uncertainty regarding the scope of the MST
obligation enshrined in Article 4. (See also Margaret Clare Ryan, “Glamis
Gold, Ltd v The United States and the Fair and Equitable Treatment Standard”,
(2011) 56:4 McGill LJ 919 at 957). However, once again, HFN did not lead any
material evidence to demonstrate how, as a practical matter, it would face a
non-speculative possibility of an appreciable adverse impact on its asserted
Aboriginal interests, if an arbitral panel were to give a Chinese investor the
benefit of a standard that is different from the one contemplated by the quotes
above from Glamis Gold and Mobil. Indeed, Mr. Thomas’
uncontradicted evidence is that only one of eleven cases that post-date the
2001 Interpretation Note and that have raised a challenge under the MST
obligation in Article 1105 of the NAFTA have succeeded (Cross Examination on
Affidavit of John Christopher Thomas [Thomas Cross], Applicant’s Record, at p
785). That said, I recognize that the tribunal in Pope & Talbot,
above, concluded that the measure challenged under Article 1105 in that case
would have contravened even the more limited interpretation of MST reflected in
the 2001 Interpretation Note. However, I also note that the total number of
cases in which Canada has been found to have violated the MST obligations set
forth in the NAFTA and the other 24 FIPAs to which Canada is a party is
extremely small.
[105] Considering
the foregoing, together with the fact that the current aggregate level of
investment from Chinese investors into Canada is only a small fraction of the
aggregate level of U.S. investment in Canada in each year over the last two
decades, I am satisfied that the potential for HFN’s asserted Aboriginal rights
to be adversely impacted as a result of the MST obligations in the CCFIPPA is
speculative and non-appreciable.
2.
Expropriation
[106] Among
other things, Article 10(1) of the CCFIPPA provides as follows:
Covered
investments or returns of investors of either Contracting Party shall not be
expropriated, nationalized or subjected to measures having an effect equivalent
to expropriation or nationalization in the territory of the other Contracting
Party … except for a public purpose, under domestic due procedures of law, in a
non-discriminatory manner and against compensation.
[107] It is
common ground between the Parties that this obligation protects investors
against both direct and indirect expropriation.
[108] HFN
maintains that the prohibition on direct and indirect expropriation without
compensation is specifically designed to ensure that Chinese investors will be
compensated in circumstances where they would not be compensated under domestic
law. Stated differently, HFN asserts that once the CCFIPPA is ratified, it will
no longer be open to any Canadian legislative body to expropriate investments
of Chinese investors without full compensation. As a result, HFN submits that Canada will have given up a significant degree of flexibility in its ability to protect
lands and resources that are within the scope of its asserted Aboriginal
interests.
[109] In
response, the Respondents state that Canada has a longstanding policy of not
expropriating third party interests in order to settle land claims, and that
lands held by third parties are only ever acquired on a “willing seller,
willing buyer” basis. This was supported by documentation from the Department
of Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada. As a result, the
Respondents maintain that, as a practical matter, there will be no change in
the range of potential options that would be realistically considered and
available to Canada to protect or accommodate HFN’s asserted Aboriginal
interests. Citing Toronto Area Transit Operating Authority v Dell Holdings
Ltd, [1997] 1 S.C.R. 32, at paras 20-23, the Respondents note that there is a
strong presumption in Canadian law that whenever land is expropriated,
compensation will be paid, unless the words of the statute authorizing
expropriation clearly state otherwise.
[110] In
the absence of any evidence to suggest the existence of a non-speculative
possibility that Canada or the Province of British Columbia may, in the absence
of the CCFIPPA, have otherwise entertained the possibility of expropriating
without compensation, I am left to conclude that the loss of this theoretical
possibility is not likely to have the non-speculative potential to result in
adverse impacts on HFN’s asserted Aboriginal rights.
[111] HFN
also submits that the prohibition on indirect expropriation will reduce the
scope of potential measures that may be taken to preserve its land and
resources. As with the MST obligation in Article 4, HFN states that there is a
significant level of uncertainty regarding the extent to which measures may be
found to constitute indirect expropriation. It adds that it is clear that
legitimate government measures enacted in the public interest can constitute
expropriation, even in the absence of discrimination. In addition, citing the
decision of the NAFTA panel in Metalclad, above, it states that the
investment-backed legitimate expectations of an investor will be taken into
account in assessing whether there has been an indirect expropriation.
Furthermore, it maintains that a measure which has a substantial adverse impact
on the value of an investment may be found to constitute indirect expropriation.
[112] In
support of its position that the expropriation provisions in Article 10 may
lead Canada to refrain from adopting a measure that would otherwise likely be
embraced to protect or accommodate HFN’s asserted Aboriginal interests, HFN
noted that Canada has paid a total of approximately $160 million to settled
claims based on expropriation under the NAFTA. Those claims were brought by
Ethyl Corporation, in respect of a ban on the import and interprovincial trade
of MMT, a suspected neurotoxin; and by Abitibi Bowater, in respect of
legislation passed by the Government of Newfoundland to expropriate certain of
the company’s lands and assets, including resource rights, after it announced
that it intended to close a pulp & paper mill located in that province.
[113] In
response, the Respondents note that Annex B.10 of the CCFIPPA defines indirect
expropriation in terms of “a measure or series of measures of a Contracting
Party that has an effect equivalent to direct expropriation without formal
transfer of title or outright seizure.” In addition, the Respondents note that
Annex B.10 clarifies that “the sole fact that a measure or series of measures
of a Contracting Party has an adverse effect on the economic value of an
investment does not establish that an indirect expropriation has occurred.”
Moreover, they assert that the following provision in paragraph 3 of Annex B.10
makes it clear that the circumstances in which bona fide regulation may
constitute indirect expropriation are rare:
Except in rare circumstances, such as if a measure or series of
measures is so severe in light of its purpose that it cannot be reasonably
viewed as having been adopted and applied in good faith, a non-discriminatory
measure or series of measures of a Contracting Party that is designed and
applied to protect the legitimate public objectives for the well-being of
citizens, such as health, safety and the environment, does not constitute
indirect expropriation.
[114] In
Reply, HFN noted that Mr. Thomas agreed on cross-examination that bona fide
regulation with a public purpose may constitute expropriation under the
CCFIPPA, and that the form of a measure and the intent of a state are not
determinative. HFN observed that Mr. Thomas further agreed that the question of
when regulation crosses the line and constitutes a measure “tantamount to
expropriation” is a contentious issue, and that there is no bright line which
identifies when compensation will be required, because each case is very fact
dependent (Thomas Cross, Applicant’s Record, at pp 754 – 760).
[115] In
addition, HFN noted that Annex B.10 does not provide any protection for
measures whose purpose is to protect Aboriginal rights and title, or to
otherwise fulfill Canada’s obligations under section 35 of the Constitution.
In this regard, it underscored that Mr. MacKay acknowledged that no attempt was
made to negotiate specific protection for such measures, because Canada did not want “to enter that trading game” (MacKay Cross, Applicant’s Record, at p 535).
It concludes from this that a measure aimed at protecting the rights of
Aboriginal peoples would not benefit from Annex B.10.
[116] As
with the MST provision in Article 4 of the CCFIPPA, discussed above, HFN
submits that the MFN provision in Article 5 would effectively negate the
limitations in Annex B.10, which Canada and the U.S. added to their respective
model foreign protection agreements in 2004, to clarify the framework for
determining whether an indirect expropriation has occurred. The evidence relied
upon by HFN in this regard closely tracks that which was discussed at
paragraphs 100-102 above, in respect of the interplay between the MFN and MST
provisions in Articles 5 and 4 of the CCFIPPA, respectively.
[117] For
essentially the same reasons set forth at paragraph 103 above, I have been left
to speculate as to whether the MFN provision would be applied so as to negate
all or some of the limitations set forth in Annex B.10, notwithstanding the
fact that Article 35(4) specifically states that the Annexes and footnotes to
the CCFIPPA constitute integral parts of that agreement.
[118] Indeed,
I am satisfied that even without considering the MFN provisions in Article 5,
it is not entirely clear how the language in Annex B.10 and Article 10 may be
applied to measures that may be alleged to constitute indirect expropriation.
This was conceded by Mr. Thomas (Thomas Cross, Applicant’s Record, at pp.
754-755).
[119] However,
I accept Mr. Thomas’ evidence that the circumstances in which a
non-discriminatory measure that is designed and applied to protect the legitimate
public objectives, as contemplated in Annex B.10, might be found to constitute
indirect expropriation are likely to be rare (Thomas Opinion, at para 33). I
also accept his uncontested evidence that, apart from one notice of intent to
file a claim, which did not proceed to the establishment of a tribunal, there
have been no other claims, let alone a tribunal finding, against Canada, for
any federal, provincial or territorial measures taken in relation to Aboriginal
rights or interests, or for allegedly unlawful measures taken by First Nations
themselves (Thomas Opinion, at paras 29-30 and 127). Likewise, I accept Mr.
Thomas’ evidence that there has only been one such claim brought against the
United States (Glamis Gold, above), to challenge regulatory measures
taken to protect Aboriginal interests, and that this claim not only was rejected,
but provides a good example of how such interests would be taken into
consideration by an arbitral panel applying the standards set out in the
CCFIPPA (Thomas Opinion, at paras 31 and 199-204).
[120] Given
the foregoing, and in the absence of any evidence to the contrary, I have not
been persuaded that there is an appreciable and non-speculative potential for
either (i) an arbitral tribunal to find that measures designed to protect or
accommodate HFN’s asserted Aboriginal interests contravene the expropriation
provisions in Article 10 of the CCFIPPA, or (ii) Canada to refrain from
implementing a measure that would otherwise be implemented for that purpose,
due to a fear of being found liable to pay significant damages to one or more
Chinese investors.
3.
The
Exceptions in the CCFIPPA
[121] In
support of its position that Canada continues to have ample policy flexibility
to protect and accommodate HFN’s asserted Aboriginal interests, the Respondents
note that, as with each of the other FIPAs that Canada has entered into, the
CCFIPPA contains general exceptions to ensure that the federal government and
sub-national governments retain policy flexibility in key areas. In this regard,
they note that “specific exemptions,” sometimes called “reservations,” are used
to exempt specific matters from the application of some or all of a FIPA’s
obligations; whereas “general exemptions” are typically used to carve out broad
subject-matter areas from a FIPA’s application.
[122] With
respect to specific exceptions, the Respondents assert that, pursuant to
Article 8, existing non-conforming measures are grandfathered against the
application of the MFN provisions in Article 5, the national treatment provisions
in Article 6, and the provisions relating to senior management and boards of
directors in Article 7. In addition, the Respondents note that, pursuant to
Article 8, Canada has also reserved policy flexibility with respect to measures
that may be adopted in the future pursuant to certain programs or in sensitive
sectors, by exempting such measures from the application of Articles 5, 6 and
7. For example, the Respondents note that, pursuant to Article 8, procurement
and subsidies are exempted from these obligations in the CCFIPPA. Moreover,
through the application of Annex B.8, Article 8 also provides that Articles 5,
6 and 7 do not apply to measures relating to, among other things, social
services that are established or so maintained for a public purpose, and, most
importantly for present purposes, any rights and privileges accorded to
Aboriginal peoples [the “Aboriginal Reservation”].
[123] The
Respondents submit that the Aboriginal Reservation allows all levels of
domestic governments, including Aboriginal governments with legislative and
regulatory powers, to provide rights and preferences to Aboriginal people that
may otherwise be inconsistent with the obligations set forth in the CCFIPPA.
The Respondents observe that Canada has ensured that policy flexibility is
retained to provide preferences for Aboriginal interests, in each of the other
FIPAs that it has entered into.
[124] It
appears to be common ground between the parties that the Aboriginal Reservation
does not apply to the MST provisions in Article 4, the expropriation provisions
in Article 10 or the performance requirements provisions in Article 9 (which
apparently reiterate obligations already covered by the separate Agreement
on Trade Related Investment Measures, to which all WTO Members are a party
and against which reservations may not be taken). According to Mr. MacKay’s
uncontradicted evidence, the various FIPAs to which Canada is a party,
including the CCFIPPA, do not extend reservations with respect to MST and
expropriation because such reservations “would defeat the purpose of the
treaty, which is to create reciprocal legal stability for foreign investors in
the host state.” Mr. MacKay added that the MST and expropriation obligations
are simply “basic protections against lack of due process, denial of justice
and confiscatory conduct” (MacKay Affidavit, at para 58).
[125] With
respect to the general exceptions in the CCFIPPA, the Respondents noted that Canada has exempted various types of measures from the application of the CCFIPPA’s
obligations generally. This includes, pursuant to Article 33(2), environmental
measures that are (i) necessary to ensure compliance with laws and regulations
that are not inconsistent with the provisions of the CCFIPPA, (ii) necessary to
protect human, animal or plant life or health, or (iii) relate to the
conservation of living or nonliving exhaustible natural resources, if such
measures are made effective in conjunction with restrictions on domestic
production or consumption.
[126] HFN
maintains that the foregoing exceptions and the Aboriginal Reservation do not
preserve sufficient policy flexibility for Canada to protect and accommodate
its asserted Aboriginal interests. With respect to the environmental exception
in Article 33(2) in particular, it notes that the first two of three types of
measures described therein are confined to measures that are necessary
to achieve the stated objectives, and that the burden to demonstrate such
necessity would be upon Canada. Relying upon Andrew Newcombe and Lluis
Paradell, Law and Practice of Investment Treaties (Austin, Tex.: Wolters
Kluwer, 2009), pp 500-506, HFN suggests that the meaning of “necessary” can be
situated on a continuum ranging from indispensable or of absolute necessity, to
a contribution to achieving the stated objectives. Newcombe and Paradell also
note, more broadly, that general exceptions such as those discussed above raise
many interpretive issues that have not yet been clarified in the jurisprudence.
[127] I
accept that there is some uncertainty regarding the scope of the general and
specific exemptions discussed above. However, it remains far from clear how
this uncertainty assists HFN to establish that the potential adverse effects on
its asserted Aboriginal rights are appreciable and non-speculative.
[128] When
pressed during the hearing on this point, and more broadly on how the CCFIPPA
in general gives rise to the potential for such effects, HFN struggled. At one
point, it stated that “it is not unreasonable to imagine a scenario where
taking steps to protect aboriginal rights might result in the cancellation of
the permit, which in turn, then … [might be claimed to result in a] substantial
reduction in the value of [a Chinese investor’s] investment” (Transcript, at p
178). This is similar to its written submission that an arbitral panel might
find a contravention of the CCFIPPA, and impose substantial damages on Canada,
in respect of the quashing of a resource extraction permit by the Courts, on
the ground that either (i) Canada failed to adequately consult or accommodate
asserted Aboriginal rights, or (ii) the permit authorizes development which
unjustifiably infringes Aboriginal or treaty rights. In the absence of any
evidence to demonstrate that there is a non-speculative and appreciable risk
that an arbitral panel might not only make such a finding in respect of an
identifiable permit, but also that such a finding would adversely impact upon
HFN’s asserted Aboriginal interests, I am unable to agree with HFN that the
ratification of the CCFIPPA gives rise to such a non-speculative and
appreciable risk.
[129] HFN
also stated that the ratification of the CCFIPPA gives rise to an appreciable
and non-speculative risk that its asserted Aboriginal interests will be
adversely impacted by virtue of the fact that Canada will take into account the
risk of an adverse arbitral panel ruling, in deciding how to accommodate those
interests. This is discussed in greater detail at paragraphs 82 and 83 above. However,
HFN has not adduced any evidence to persuasively demonstrate that as a result
of the fact that Canada will take such risk into account when developing
measures to protect or accommodate HFN’s asserted Aboriginal interests, there
is an appreciable and non-speculative possibility that Canada’s scope of action
will be constrained, fettered or influenced in a way that will leave HFN worse
off, in terms of those interests, than if the CCFIPPA is not implemented. In
the absence of such evidence, and considering the very basic nature of the MST
and expropriation obligations, as well as the fact that the general and
specific exemptions discussed above will afford policy flexibility to Canada, I find that this assertion is entirely speculative in nature. My conclusion in this
regard is reinforced by Mr. MacKay’s evidence that he is “unaware of any
decision of a Canadian court finding that either the minimum standard of
treatment or expropriation provision interferes with or are incompatible with
Aboriginals’ claims or rights” (MacKay Affidavit, at para 59).
[130] Another
example HFN provided as to how, as a practical matter, ratification of the
CCFIPPA might adversely impact upon its asserted Aboriginal interests was the
possibility that HFN might want to place a moratorium on land development until
regulations governing a land use plan on its reserves or broader territory have
been enacted. HFN observed that the Tlicho Government [Tlicho] did
something similar and then was unable, in proceedings before the Supreme Court of
the Northwest Territories, to prevent an environmental assessment from proceeding.
This occurred notwithstanding that the assessment included within its scope
potential access roads that the Tlicho did not want included in the assessment
(Tlicho Government v MacKenzie Valley Impact Review Board, 2011 NWTSC
31). Extrapolating from this case, HFN submitted that it is not difficult to
envision a scenario in which a similar moratorium could give rise to an adverse
arbitral ruling against Canada, if it were found to violate the MST or
expropriation provisions in the CCFIPPA. In such a case, HFN submitted that it
could be pressured by Canada to either abandon the moratorium or pay any
damages levied against Canada (Transcript, at pp 212-218). In the latter
regard, HFN noted that Tlicho has a Land Claims and Self Government Agreement with
Canada and the Government of the Northwest Territories, and that paragraph
7.13.6 of that agreement requires Tlicho, at the request of Canada, and in the
event of an adverse ruling by an international arbitral panel in respect of any
law or other exercise of Tlicho’s powers, to remedy such law or other measure,
to enable Canada to perform its international obligations. HFN suggested that
it was not unreasonable to expect that it will be required to agree to a
similar provision in any similar agreement that it ultimately may negotiate
with Canada and the Government of British Columbia.
[131] Once
again, I have not been persuaded that there is an appreciable and
non-speculative possibility of this scenario occurring, particularly given the
absence of any evidence that (i) HFN is considering such a moratorium, (ii)
such a moratorium might somehow adversely impact upon a potential Chinese
investment in HFN territory, (iii) there would be a non-speculative possibility
of such moratorium being found to contravene the CCFIPPA, and (iv) Canada would
not retain sufficient policy flexibility to deal with this in a way that would
avoid any adverse impact upon the HFN’s asserted Aboriginal interests.
c.
Conclusions
regarding the potential effects that HFN claims will result from a change in
the legal framework applicable to land and resource regulation
[132] For
the reasons given above, HFN has not demonstrated that the ratification of the
CCFIPPA has the non-speculative and appreciable potential to adversely impact
HFN’s asserted Aboriginal interests, as a result of any changes that the
CCFIPPA will make to the legal framework applicable to land and resource
regulation in Canada.
[133] My
conclusion in this regard is reinforced by the following:
a. Canada’s
experience under NAFTA and the 24 FIPAs that it has entered into with other
countries is perhaps the best available evidence that is relevant to an
assessment of the potential for the CCFIPPA to have the effects identified by
HFN. Indeed, that experience is more relevant than the international experience
under agreements to which Canada is not a party, and in respect of which HFN
identified only a very small number of arbitral decisions in the course of this
proceeding.
- As
discussed at paragraph 104 above, Mr. Thomas’ uncontradicted evidence is that
only one of eleven cases that post-date the 2001 Interpretation Note and that
have raised a challenge under the MST obligation in Article 1105 of the NAFTA
have succeeded. In any event, the total number of cases in which Canada has been found to have violated that obligation is extremely small.
- Likewise,
as discussed at paragraph 119, above, Mr. Thomas also provided uncontested
evidence that, apart from one notice to file a claim, which did not proceed to
the establishment of a tribunal, there have been no other claims, let alone a
tribunal finding against Canada, in respect of any federal, provincial or
territorial measures taken in relation to Aboriginal rights or interests, or in
respect of allegedly unlawful measures taken by First Nations themselves; and
there has only been one such claim filed against the United States, which was
rejected.
- Only two
judgments for damages have ever been rendered against Canada (Pope &
Talbot and SD Myers, above), in an aggregate amount of less than $7
million, although there has been an adverse finding of liability against Canada
in a third case (Mobil, above), in which damages remain to be
determined; and there are approximately six others in which claims have been
filed but not resolved, and a further two in which a notice of intent has been
filed but no formal claim has been made.
- As
discussed at paragraph 112 above, only two claims against Canada under the NAFTA have ever been settled with compensation, for an aggregate amount of
approximately $160 million (Transcript, at pp 343-348).
- Mr. MacKay,
whose evidence on this point does not appear to have been contradicted, stated
in his affidavit that he is not aware of any evidence suggesting that any of
the aforementioned losses or monetary settlements have implicated or impaired
Canada’s ability to regulate in the public interest in a non-discriminatory
manner, and none of the claims that have ever been brought against Canada have
involved Aboriginal rights (MacKay Affidavit, at para 69). He also provided
uncontested evidence that, to his knowledge, no Canadian court has ever found
that either the MST or expropriation provisions in international agreements to
which Canada is a party interferes with or are incompatible with Aboriginals’
claims or rights; and, indeed, no litigation has ever been initiated in Canada
by Aboriginal groups regarding an alleged impact on Aboriginal rights of any
FIPA or other investment treaty, including the NAFTA, since 1989 (MacKay
Affidavit, at paras 59 and 69).
-
It appears to be common ground between the parties that, to date, there have
been no claims filed against Canada under any of the 24 FIPAs that it has
entered into.
b. The
aggregate existing level of investment in Canada by Chinese investors is a
small fraction of the level of aggregate level of investment in Canada by U.S. investors in each year since the NAFTA came into force on January 1, 1994. According
to Mr. MacKay’s uncontested evidence, in 2011, the latest year for which data
is available, Chinese investors had an aggregate of approximately $10.9 billion
in investment in Canada, versus approximately $326 billion from U.S. investors – almost 30 times the level of aggregate investment from China. Although CNOOC Ltd.
subsequently purchased Nexen, Inc. in a transaction valued at approximately $15
billion, Mr. MacKay’s uncontested evidence is that most of Nexen’s assets are
located outside Canada (MacKay Cross, Applicant’s Record, at p 485). According
to data included at Exhibit H to Mr. MacKay’s affidavit, the level of aggregate
investment in Canada from U.S. investors was approximately $103 billion in 1994
and has steadily increased since that time.
c. No
evidence was led to demonstrate or to even suggest that the experience under
the CCFIPPA is likely to be any different than the experience to date under the
NAFTA or the 24 FIPAs to which Canada currently is a party.
d. There
is no evidence that any sub-national governments in Canada have been fettered
or “chilled” by NAFTA or the 24 FIPAs in force, from legislating in the public
interest. Indeed, the moratoriums imposed by the Government of Quebec against
natural (shale) gas fracking (in respect of which a Notice of Intent was filed
in 2012 by Lone Pine Resources Inc) and by Ontario against offshore wind farms
(in respect of which Windstream Energy LLC filed a claim in 2013) suggest that
they have not been so fettered or “chilled.”
e. Apart
from Ms. Sayers’ hearsay evidence obtained from the Wall Street Journal,
which reported that China Investment Corp. was close to purchasing a 12.5%
stake in some timber assets held by Island Timberlands LP for approximately
$100 million, there is no evidence regarding actual or potential future
investment in HFN’s claimed territory, let alone on its reserves, by Chinese investors.
f. No
evidence was led to demonstrate or even to suggest that any existing federal or
sub-national measures, including any measures established by HFN, might
contravene or be in conflict with any of the provisions in the CCFIPPA.
g. There
is very little, if any, evidence of a causal link between the CCFIPPA and
potential investment in Canada by Chinese investors, and there is no such
evidence of such a link to any potential investment in HFN territory. The only
evidence that was adduced in this case was in a document entitled Final
Environmental Assessment of the China Foreign Investment Protection Agreement
(FIPA), included at Exhibit BB to Mr. MacKay’s affidavit. At page 2 of that
document, the following statement is made:
In the initial [Environmental
Assessment], it was found that significant changes to investment in Canada were
not expected to occur as a result of the Canada-China FIPA … In this Final
[Environmental Assessment], the claim that no significant environmental impacts
are expected based on the introduction of a Canada-China FIPA are upheld;
however, over time, Chinese investors have shown greater interest in investing
in Canada, and this trend is likely to continue, if not increase with the
introduction of a FIPA.
h. Even
if the only reasonable accommodation of an Aboriginal right asserted by HFN
would require action such as the expropriation of lands or a moratorium, an
arbitral panel would have no power to enjoin such action, and any award that
may be made on behalf of a Chinese investor would be made solely against Canada. HFN will never be a respondent in any action initiated by a Chinese investor under
the CCFIPPA.
i.
HFN’s
existing law making powers are those conferred under the Indian Act to
over 600 bands, and are confined to zoning and land use planning, the
preservation, protection and management of animals and fish, and business
licensing and regulation (sections 81 to 83 of the Indian Act).
j.
HFN’s
existing Land Use Plan and Cedar Access Strategy can not be challenged by a
Chinese investor.
k. The
boundaries of HFN’s claimed traditional territory remain uncertain. There are
at least nine First Nations whose claimed traditional territory overlaps with
HFN’s claimed traditional territory (Affidavit of Jim Barkwell, Respondents’
Record, Volume II, Tab 34, at para 16).
[134] I
agree with the Respondents that HFN’s submissions ultimately may be reduced to
the assertions that, irrespective of Canada’s experience to date under the
NAFTA and the 24 other FIPAs to which it is a party, and with Chinese
investment in Canada in general, (i) such investment in its territory may occur
in the future, (ii) a measure may one day be adopted in relation to that
investment, (iii) a claim may be brought against Canada by the hypothetical
investor, (iv) an award will be made against Canada in respect of the measure
in question, notwithstanding the basic nature of the obligations in the
CCFIPPA, the Aboriginal Reservation, and the other exceptions therein, and
(v) Canada’s ability to protect and accommodate HFN’s asserted Aboriginal
interests will be diminished, either as a result of that award, because Canada
would be chilled by the prospect of such an award. HFN has failed to
demonstrate that this scenario is anything other than speculative and remote.
(iii) Adverse
impacts on the scope of self-government that HFN may be able to achieve
[135] HFN
submits that the legal rights granted to Chinese investors under the CCFIPPA
will have a direct adverse impact on the scope of self-government which it can
achieve either through (i) the exercise of its Aboriginal rights, (ii) the
treaty-making process, or (iii) the exercise of delegated authority from the
federal or provincial governments. HFN maintains that no matter what type of
governance structure it utilizes, its authority will be limited or constrained
by disciplines in the CCFIPPA, including the rights that it grants to Chinese
investors. It asserts that this adverse impact is sufficient to trigger Canada’s duty to consult with it prior to ratification of the CCFIPPA. I respectfully
disagree.
[136] In
support of its submissions on this point, HFN notes that, pursuant to Article
2(2) of the CCFIPPA, the treaty will apply to any entity whenever that entity
exercises any regulatory, administrative or other governmental authority
delegated to it by a Contracting Party. Accordingly, it states that it will be
subject to the CCFIPPA, whether it exercises law making or governance powers
pursuant to an aboriginal right, through a delegation agreement with a province
and/or the federal government, or through a treaty protected by s. 35 of the Constitution.
[137] It is
common ground between the parties that HFN has never signed a treaty or “land
claim agreement” with the Crown in right of Canada or British Columbia.
However, HFN is a party, together with Canada and the Government of British
Columbia, to a non-legally binding agreement entitled Framework Agreement to
Negotiate a Treaty [Framework Agreement], dated July 27, 2007. According to
Mr. Barkwell’s uncontested affidavit evidence, that agreement was entered into
within the framework of the British Columbia Treaty Process [BC Treaty Process].
By 2009, HFN had advanced to Stage 4 of that process, which has six stages and is
not structured to require any assessment or proof of Aboriginal rights or
title. While there have been no active negotiations since 2009, the uncontested
evidence of Ms. Sayers is that HFN remains committed to that process (Sayers
Cross, Respondents’ Record, Volume III, pp. 915-916). The substantive matters
under negotiation, and reflected in the Framework Agreement, include the
following:
a. Land,
including title, law-making authority, selection and access;
b. Water
and water resources;
c. Forestry
and forest resources;
d. Fisheries
and marine resources;
e. Language,
heritage and culture;
f. Mining
and subsurface resources;
g. Wildlife
and migratory birds;
h. Governance;
i.
Financial
matters including, but not limited to, fiscal arrangements and sharing of
resource revenues and royalties;
j.
Environmental
management;
k. General
provisions, including, but not limited to, certainty, eligibility and
enrollment, ratification, amendment, implementation and dispute resolution; and
l.
The
settlement of HFN’s claims of aboriginal rights and title, including but not
limited to, the related financial component and certainty issues referred to
above.
[138] In
addition to the foregoing, HFN notes that it already engages in some land use
regulation through its Land Use Plan and the associated Cedar Access Strategy.
[139] HFN
asserts that because of Canada’s agreement to be bound by the CCFIPPA, the HFN
may be prevented from negotiating an agreement or treaty which protects its
rights to exercise its authority in the best interests of the Hupacasath
people, including to conserve, manage and protect lands, resources and habitats
and to engage in other governance activities, in accordance with traditional
Hupacasath laws, customs and practices.
[140] It is
important to distinguish between potential adverse effects on asserted
Aboriginal rights and potential adverse effects on a First Nation’s future
negotiating position. The duty to consult applies solely to the former, where
they are demonstrated to be non-speculative, appreciable and causally linked to
particular conduct contemplated by the Crown. Stated alternatively, that duty does
not apply to contemplated conduct that may simply have potential adverse
effects on HFN’s future negotiating position (Rio Tinto, above, at paras
46 and 50). It also does not apply to other interests of HFN that do not
specifically concern HFN’s asserted Aboriginal rights, as listed at paragraph 53
above.
[141] Accordingly,
to the extent that any of the potential adverse impacts identified by HFN
concern matters that may, as a result of the CCFIPPA, be more or less likely to
be addressed in any future treaty that HFN may negotiate with Canada, and that do
not directly concern HFN’s asserted Aboriginal rights themselves, those potential
impacts cannot give rise to a duty to consult. This includes adverse impacts on
those dimensions of “the best interests of the Hupacasath people” and “other
governance activities” which do not directly concern HFN’s asserted Aboriginal
rights (Ahousaht Indian Band v Canada (Minister of Fisheries and Oceans),
2007 FC 567, at paras 31-32; aff’d 2008 FCA 212 [Ahousat FCA], at para 37).
[142] HFN
expressed a specific concern that any governance rights to be included in any
treaty that may be negotiated as part of the BC Treaty Process, or otherwise,
will have to conform to Canada’s international legal obligations, including
those under the CCFIPPA. In this regard, it identified a number of agreements
concluded between First Nations and the federal, provincial or territorial
governments which make this clear. These include the Yekooche First Nation
Agreement in Principle (at paragraph 24(b)) and the K’ómoks Agreement in
Principle (at paragraph 35), which require that any Final Agreement provide for
the consistency of the First Nations’ laws and other exercises of power with
Canada’s international legal obligations. Similarly, the Westbank First Nation
Self-Government Agreement (paragraph 36) requires that First Nation take all
necessary steps to “ensure compliance of its laws and actions with Canada’s international legal obligations” and requires it to “remedy any Westbank Law or action found
to be inconsistent with Canada’s international legal obligations by an
international treaty body or other competent tribunal.” A number of other
agreements identified by HFN contain similar provisions.
[143] If
HFN’s position is that the CCFIPPA increases, to a non-trivial degree, the
probability that these types of provisions will be required to be included in
any Final Agreement or other treaty that it may ultimately negotiate with Canada, this was not supported by any evidence. The same is true if HFN’s position is that
the ratification of the CCFIPPA will reduce the scope for HFN to avoid having
to agree to these types of provisions, or to negotiate alternative provisions
that may impose lesser constraints on its ability to protect its asserted
Aboriginal rights. Indeed, HFN repeatedly asserted during its oral submissions
that it is already highly probable, if not virtually certain, that Canada will insist on the inclusion of these types of provisions in any Final Agreement or
other treaty that it may ultimately negotiate with HFN (Transcript, at pp. 23
and 153 – 157). The presence of those provisions in the above-mentioned
agreements, and others appended to Ms. Sayers’ Affidavit, lends support to this
view.
[144] Given
the existence of those provisions in those agreements, and in the absence of
evidence to suggest that, but for the ratification of the CCFIPPA, HFN may have
been able to negotiate different provisions that provide greater scope for HFN
to protect its asserted Aboriginal rights, I am satisfied that HFN has not
established the required causal link between the ratification of the CCFIPPA
and the potential adverse impacts that it has identified. Stated differently, I
am satisfied that HFN has not established a causal link between the
ratification of the CCFIPPA and the types of treaty provisions that it has
identified, and that it may have to agree to include in any future treaty that
it ultimately negotiates with Canada. The evidence suggests that Canada is likely to require HFN to exercise its treaty rights in a manner consistent with
the types of obligations that are in the CCFIPPA, in any event.
[145] In
its written and oral submissions, HFN placed great significance on the fact
that the ratification of the CCFIPPA would extend the benefit of the provisions
described above to Chinese investors. For example, HFN maintained that the
CCFIPPA will require HFN to refrain from regulating in a manner which has the
effect of substantially diminishing the value of an investment owned by a
Chinese national without paying compensation. It further maintained that the
CCFIPPA will require HFN to ensure that it provides Chinese investors with
“fair and equitable treatment,” as that term has been interpreted by
arbitrators; and that HFN will not be able to impose performance requirements
which require the use of local products. While it acknowledges that it will
still be able to provide preferential treatment to First Nations, it stated
that it will be constrained from making distinctions between other companies if
some of them have Chinese investors.
[146] However,
once again, HFN did not adduce any evidence to suggest that there is a
non-speculative and appreciable prospect that, in the absence of the CCFIPPA,
HFN may have somehow legislated or acted in a manner that (i) is inconsistent
with one or more of the obligations contemplated in the CCFIPPA, but (ii) nevertheless
respects Canada’s existing obligations to investors from NAFTA countries and
the 24 countries with which Canada has entered into a FIPA (Ahousaht
FCA, above).
VIII.
Conclusion
[147] The
potential adverse impacts that HFN claims the ratification of the CCFIPPA would
have on its asserted Aboriginal rights, due to changes that the CCFIPPA may
bring about to the legal framework applicable to land and resource regulation
in Canada, are non-appreciable and entirely speculative in nature. Moreover,
HFN has not established the requisite causal link between those potential
adverse impacts and the CCFIPPA.
[148] The
same is true with respect to HFN’s assertions that the rights granted to
Chinese investors under the CCFIPPA will directly and adversely impact the
scope of self-government which HFN can achieve, either through exercising its
Aboriginal rights, through the treaty making process, or through the exercise
of delegated authority from Canada or the Government of British Columbia.
[149] Accordingly,
the ratification of the CCFIPPA by Canada without engaging in consultations
with HFN would not breach either (i) Canada’s constitutional obligation to act
honourably with HFN in all of its dealings with HFN, and particularly in
respect of HFN’s asserted Aboriginal rights, or (ii) Canada’s duty to consult with
HFN before taking any action that may adversely impact upon those rights.
[150] This
application will therefore be dismissed.
JUDGMENT
THIS
COURT DECLARES, ADJUDGES AND ORDERS that this Application is dismissed with
costs.
"Paul S.
Crampton"