Unnatural Law: Rethinking Canadian Environmental Law and Policy
by David R. Boyd ISBN: 0774810491
Post Your Opinion | | A Review of: Unnatural Law: Rethinking Canadian Environmental Law and Policy by David ColterjohnIn May 2000, an outbreak of E. Coli bacteria contaminated the
drinking water in Walkerton, Ontario. Seven people died and thousands
of others were sickened in an incident that attracted intense
national media scrutiny. The ensuing wave of public outrage forced
the Ontario provincial government to introduce new legislation, the
Safe Drinking Water Act, which binds that province's municipalities
to mandatory water safety standards.
Far from being an anomaly, Walkerton's water safety problems are
shared by the residents of hundreds of other Canadian communities,
where "boil water advisories" are a fact of everyday life.
From Kitchener to Kelowna, over the past decade thousands more have
become "violently ill" with water-borne illnesses. Some
of these have also died. Not only do Canadians lack a
constitutionally-protected right to safe drinking water, but
"most Canadian provinces and territories have no legal requirement
that the public be informed of known water quality problems.
So warns David R. Boyd in his compelling book Unnatural Law,
Rethinking Canadian Environmental Law and Policy. Using the lawyer's
analytical equivalent of a forensic microscope, Boyd minutely
examines the laws, regulations and policies that supposedly protect
the health of Canada's citizens and ecosystems. As thorough as he
is passionate, Boyd proposes major reconstructive surgery to a
sweeping range of international, federal and provincial laws.
Boyd, a professor and environmental lawyer who has argued before
the Supreme Court of Canada, uses the image of a doctor examining
a patient as his controlling metaphor. With its main sections titled
Examination, Diagnosis and Prescription, Unnatural Law shows that
the Canadian environmental legal regime is in critical condition
and stands in need of drastic legislative treatment. Despite some
notable successes, a recent University of Victoria study ranked
Canada's overall environmental record in 28th place out of the 29
countries in the OECD, ahead only of the United States.
Unnatural Law is so detailed, comprehensive and closely argued that
any attempt to summarize its contents seems glib, if not misleading.
In the Examination section, for example, Boyd divides his chapter
on water into four subsections that cover drinking water, water
pollution, water use and conservation, and bulk water exports. Here,
in 52 pages of fact-packed, footnote-anchored text, Boyd proves
beyond all reasonable doubt that, "heavily influenced by the
enduring myth of endless water .. . . our law and policies generally
fail to provide the level water security sought by Canadians."
Though Boyd credits Canada's admirable role in introducing and
implementing the Montreal Protocol, his chapter on air quality
delivers blunt assessments of the Canadian legislative approach to
climate change and air pollution. He contrasts our nation's effective
actions on ozone depletion with its indefensible foot-dragging on
climate change. Of the first problem he writes, "Canada is
recognized as a world leader, and our domestic actions have lived
up to our international commitments. With respect to climate change,
Canada is regarded as a rogue state, sabotaging international
negotiations and violating our obligations under environmental
treaties." In 2000, during negotiations to hammer out the final
details of the Kyoto Protocol, the Canadian stance was so recalcitrant
that a coalition of environmental groups voted Canada "most
obstructive" of the 180 nations in attendance.
Boyd sets the vigorous public reaction to the deaths in Walkerton
beside our apparent indifference to regional air pollution, which
nationwide causes somewhere between 5 and 16 thousand premature
deaths each year. Fully 20 percent of Ontario's hospital admissions
for infants suffering respiratory problems are attributed to the
effects of smog. In Vancouver alone, one study projects that
achievable improvements in air quality "would save 2,800 lives
and prevent 33,000 hospital emergency room visits by 2020."
Boyd's analysis of the stresses faced by Canadian forests, oceans
and biodiversity is just as grim. In his Diagnosis section, he
identifies six systemic weaknesses in our legal system that account
for many of the problems. First, Canada and its provinces simply
lack many of the environmental laws that are commonplace around the
world. Unlike the United States, Canada just doesn't have basic
legislation like enforceable national air or water quality standards.
Always fearful of antagonizing Quebec, Ottawa generally lets
provincial governments write and implement-or not-their own
environmental laws.
Again comparing Canada unfavorably to the United States, the second
weakness Boyd examines is the problem of "excessive discretion",
on the part of the politicians and bureaucrats responsible for
making and administering the law. Here in British Columbia, he notes
that the Vancouver Public Library collects more revenue in fines
from its members than the B.C. government does for illegal logging.
In legalese, the difference between the words "must" and
"may" leaves a gap big enough for the Exxon Valdez to
sneak through.
The third major flaw in our environmental laws and policies is that
they "fail to reflect contemporary scientific knowledge and
principles." One salient example of this failure comes from
the recent Species at Risk Act, which purports to protect the
"residences" of listed species. The term has no meaning
for biologists, who happen to know that real plants and animals
live in complex, interconnected ecosystems. The point is reinforced
by a photograph of a lone "Wildlife Tree", left bleakly
standing amid the desolation of a clearcut. Three remaining systemic
weaknesses are weak implementation and enforcement, insufficient
public participation, and governments' reliance on "an unduly
narrow range of law and policy options."
Those among us who felt self-righteous when U.S. President George
W. Bush refused to ratify the Kyoto Protocol may be chagrined to
learn that in most cases, American environmental law is superior
to Canada's. U.S. legislation is more likely to include mandatory,
measurable standards and to be backed up by the budgets and resources
needed to enforce them.
Nevertheless, the American attempt to curb environmental degradation
through legislation amounts to little more than a "resounding
failure." The relative strength of American laws has done
nothing to stop individual Americans from having the largest per
capita environmental impacts in the world. At the end of the day,
the "magnitude and complexity of economic activity overwhelms
American efforts to mitigate, through the legal system, the impacts
of the economy on the environment."
As Boyd sees it, this is because environmental law is "largely
reactive, not proactive. When environmental problems arise, from
oil spills to concerns about endangered species, environmental laws
are drafted and implemented to address symptoms rather than root
causes." He identifies over-consumption in the industrialized
nations and population growth in developing countries as the problems
that need to be addressed most urgently.
The good news is that Boyd believes the grail of "sustainable
development" is achievable, but only if we take a global
perspective and use all the tools that human foresight can provide.
Not only would our legal system have to be thoroughly revised, we
would also have to abandon the growth-driven economic model that
dominates our institutions today. Furthermore, the quality and
amount of overseas development assistance would have to be radically
improved if the millions who now live in poverty are ever to live
decent, fulfilling lives.
Unnatural Law is more than an exhaustive (and exhausting!) list of
Canadian environmentalists' legal grievances. Meticulous to the
end, Boyd embraces the "precautionary principle" and makes
use of solid scientific research and the latest developments in
economic theory to prescribe new ways of living in the world.
"Sustainable solutions to today's problems exist," he
concludes, "but in order to get there we must summon unprecedented
compassion and tap unused reservoirs of ingenuity. We need to
demonstrate humility, not hubris; act on the basis of wisdom, not
wishful thinking; and recognize that we are part of, not separate
from, nature."
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