The Environmental Assessment Act, 2002 and associated regulations and agreements still apply to many projects undergoing an environmental assessment, or that have completed one. For information on project transitions to the 2018 Act, please refer to the Transition FAQs.
Under the Environmental Assessment Act, 2002 (the Act), two ministers are responsible for making the decision on whether or not to issue an Environmental Assessment Certificate for a project undergoing an environmental assessment. The first is the Minister of Environment and Climate Change Strategy. The second is the "responsible minister", who is the minister through their cabinet position with responsibility for activities in a sector.
An alternate responsible minister is designated for each of the categories for situations where the organization proposing to build a project is a government agency (for instance, a Crown corporation or a ministry) and the responsible minister is in charge of that government agency.
The following table lists the responsible ministers and alternative responsible ministers for each category of reviewable projects.
Category of Reviewable Projects | Responsible Minister | Alternate Responsible Minister |
---|---|---|
Energy Projects | Energy, Mines and Low Carbon Innovation | Forests, Lands, Natural Resource Operations and Rural Development |
Mine Projects | Energy, Mines and Low Carbon Innovation | Forests, Lands, Natural Resource Operations and Rural Development |
Industrial Projects | Forests, Lands, Natural Resource Operations and Rural Development | Jobs, Economic Recovery and Innovation |
Tourist Destination Resort Projects | Forests, Lands, Natural Resource Operations and Rural Development | Municipal Affairs |
Waste Disposal Projects | Municipal Affairs | Forests, Lands, Natural Resource Operations and Rural Development |
Water Management Projects | Municipal Affairs | Forests, Lands, Natural Resource Operations and Rural Development |
Transportation Projects | Transportation and Infrastructure | Municipal Affairs |
In 2016, a new regulation exempting certain projects from having to obtain an Environmental Assessment Certificate under the Act came into force.
The Exemption Regulation is limited to addressing part of the implications of a recent British Columbia Supreme Court case (Coastal First Nations v. British Columbia). In that case, the court found that while the Act does provide government with the authority to enter into equivalency agreements (such as that with the National Energy Board), the government must still make its own decision at the end of that equivalent process.
For more information, please see the news release.
The Environmental Assessment Office charges fees for a range of services, from undertaking environmental assessments through to compliance inspections.
The fees provide partial recovery of the costs incurred by the Environmental Assessment Office in delivering high-quality and timely environmental assessments. Revenue from fees allows the organization to maintain appropriate staffing levels. The funding is also used to support other provincial agencies in their participation in the environmental assessment process.
Explanation of the various fees associated with environmental assessments and other services.
BC Reg 50/2014 was deposited on April 14, 2014, and outlines the various fees of environmental assessments and other services.
Guidance and background on the payment of fees as set out in the Environmental Assessment Fee Regulation.
The Impact Assessment Agency of Canada (formerly the Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency) is the federal counterpart to British Columbia's Environmental Assessment Office (EAO). The EAO and the Impact Assessment Agency of Canada maintain a strong relationship to ensure projects requiring both federal and provincial environmental assessments are conducted as efficiently as possible.
The following agreements apply to projects being assessed under the Environmental Assessment Act (2002):
These agreements will eventually become irrelevant as projects assessed under the 2002 Act receive decisions, or are transitioned to the new Act, where the more current Impact Assessment Cooperation Agreement will apply.
The following agreement applied to projects assessed under the Environmental Assessment Act, 1995.
When a project falls under both provincial and federal jurisdiction, the two governments will cooperate on the environmental assessment while retaining their respective decision-making powers. The cooperation options include:
Equivalency, where the province may accept an Environmental Assessment undertaken by another jurisdiction, is not a feature of the Impact Assessment Cooperation Agreement, nor the Environmental Assessment Act, 2018.
The Federal Minister has approved seventeen environmental assessments to be conducted as substituted assessments:
Project Name |
Category | Status |
---|---|---|
Mining | Pre-Application | |
Mining | Pre-Application | |
Energy | Withdrawn | |
Energy | Withdrawn | |
Mining | Withdrawn | |
Energy |
Pre-Application |
|
Industrial | Pre-Application | |
Mining | Withdrawn | |
Energy | Withdrawn | |
Mining | Certificate Issued | |
Kitimat LNG | Energy | Amendment |
Energy | Certificate Issued | |
Mining | Pre-Application | |
Mining | Application Review | |
Energy | Withdrawn | |
Transportation | Application Review | |
Energy | Certificate Issued |
On June 21, 2010, the Environmental Assessment Office (EAO) and the National Energy Board (NEB) (now the Canada Energy Regulator) entered into an agreement (NEB-EAO Agreement (PDF)) which states the EAO will accept the NEB's environmental assessment of a proposed project (that otherwise would have to be reviewed under the Environmental Assessment Act, 2002) as an equivalent assessment and that the proposed project may proceed without a provincial Environmental Assessment Certificate.
There is also an EAO Fact Sheet on this agreement: EAO/NEB Fact Sheet (PDF).
The following projects are subject to this Agreement. Information about these projects can be found on the Canada Energy Regulator's web site.
Current agreements with Indigenous nations regarding the conduct of environmental assessments include:
In October, 2013, the EAO and the Oil and Gas Commission (OGC) signed a Memorandum of Understanding that will enhance the effectiveness and efficiency of the two agencies in fulfilling their respective roles by reducing duplication, improving timeliness and strengthening compliance and enforcement.