When the Polluter Doesn’t Pay: A Critical Review of Redwater and its Implications

  • June 07, 2018
  • Nicholas Avis

Introduction

In the case of Redwater,[1] the majority of the Alberta Court of Appeal (“ABCA”) confirmed the power of trustees in bankruptcy to disclaim environmentally contaminated property despite outstanding provincial remediation orders. The decision, though on a firm legal foundation, is controversial as it effectively shifts the cost of environmental remediation from polluters onto third parties including taxpayers. For Alberta, a province with 155,000 oil and gas wells that are not producing but not fully remediated, the long-term impact of Redwater means that third parties (including taxpayers) may be on the hook for an $8.6 billion clean-up bill.[2]

Facts & Issues

Redwater Energy Corporation (“Redwater”) was an Albertan oil and gas well company. The Alberta Energy Regulator (“AER”) assigned a licence to each well that imposed environmental obligations on Redwater, including restrictions on how and when Redwater could abandon the wells.

In May 2015, the principal secured lender commenced enforcement proceedings against Redwater. The receiver renounced control of 107 of Redwater’s 127 wells because they were non- producing and carried net liabilities stemming from environmental obligations.[3] In October 2015, a bankruptcy order appointed the receiver as trustee in bankruptcy. The trustee proceeded to disclaim the 107 wells that it previously renounced with the understanding that by disclaiming these wells, it was also disclaiming all associated remediation obligations. The AER disagreed with the trustee’s assessment and refused to allow the trustee to transfer any of the licensed wells without satisfying the AER’s environmental orders.

At trial, the trustee argued that there was an operational conflict between section 14.06(4) of the BIA and the provincial legislation governing AER licences. The Alberta Court of Queen’s Bench agreed and held that the provincial licensing scheme frustrates the operation of the BIA. The BIA prevailed under the paramountcy doctrine, allowing the Trustee to disclaim the wells. On appeal, the ABCA addressed whether: (i) environmental claims have priority in an insolvency; and

(ii) a receiver or trustee must satisfy the contingent liability inherent in the remediation of the non- producing wells in priority to the claims of secured creditors.

Judgement

The majority, Slatter JA and Schutz JA concurring, dismissed the appeal.

Applying the three-part test from AbitibiBowater,[4] the majority held that the AER’s order for clean-up costs constituted a provable claim under section 14.06(8) of the BIA. However, the AER’s claim ranked as unsecured under the BIA’s section 136 distribution scheme. This conclusion relied on the Supreme Court of Canada’s (“SCC”) reasoning in AbitibiBowater that “[i]f Parliament had intended that the debtor always satisfy all remediation costs, it would have granted the Crown a priority with respect to the totality of the debtor’s assets.”[5]

The only instance in which the BIA provides priority to environmental claims is in section 14.06(7). However, this priority is limited to instances in which the Crown has remediated the environmental contamination. Only then can it gain security in the property or immovable asset that was remediated. In practice, this is an ineffective type of security for oil and gas wells due to the nature of these assets.[6]

The majority conducted a constitutional analysis on the interaction between the AER’s licensing scheme and the BIA. Since the AER licensing scheme imposed conditions on the abandonment and transfer of wells, the provincial legislation interfered with the trustee’s right to disclaim and dispose of assets as contemplated in the BIA. This interference frustrated the objective of federal legislation. Using the paramountcy doctrine, the BIA prevailed.

In her dissent, Martin JA stated that the paramountcy doctrine was not engaged because the AER was not seeking priority. It only sought to enforce valid provincial law by requiring that the polluter remediate its abandoned wells. Allowing insolvency practitioners to disregard valid provincial law would be an extraordinary power not conferred upon them by the BIA.

Commentary

The majority’s decision aligns with recent jurisprudence. Redwater dutifully applied AbitibiBowater, the SCC’s most recent and relevant decision on this matter. AbitibiBowater established that creditors’ claims must be paid in accordance with federal insolvency legislation regardless of what provincial legislation requires. The only priority provided to environmental claims is in section 14.06(7) of the BIA. Due to the limited applicability of section 14.06(7), coupled with the nature of oil and gas wells generally, environmental claims regarding oil and gas wells are not practical candidates for section 14.06(7) priority.[7]

AbitibiBowater is only the most recent case in a decades-long evolution towards removing priority for environmental claims in Canada. In the 1991 decision PanAmericana de Bienes y Servicios SA v Northern Badger Oil & Gas Ltd,[8] a case with similar facts to Redwater, the ABCA held that receivers are responsible for discharging environmental obligations and that the costs of remediation rank ahead of secured claims. This decision has not aged well. In 1995, the SCC clarified that provinces cannot disturb the priority scheme established by federal insolvency legislation,[9] and amendments to the BIA in 1997 largely rendered Northern Badger obsolete.[10]

Harbert Distressed Investment Fund LP v General Chemical Canada Ltd[11] continued this trend. It specified that the BIA takes priority over provincial legislation and that “any provincial effort to extend further the rights to the Crown in respect of environmental contamination […are…] in conflict with the provisions of the federal statute”.[12] No priority was given to the environmental claim in this case.

English case law had a similar progression. In Re Mineral Resources Ltd,[13] the court prevented the liquidator from disclaiming a waste disposal licence and gave priority to the environmental agency’s claim: “[I]n the absence of strong factors the other way, […] the interest in the protection of the environment should prevail.”[14] This decision was later overturned in Re Celtic Extraction Ltd (In Liquidation),[15] a case with similar facts that held that environmental claims receive no priority and should be treated as unsecured claims.[16]

Considering the evolution of case law in this area and the lack of apparent serious errors in the majority’s application of AbitibiBowater, the SCC is unlikely to overturn Redwater on appeal.[17] However, Redwater is unsatisfactory as it shows that the “polluter pays” model that Canada has ostensibly adopted is in practice a “taxpayer pays” model. Bankrupt corporations pay environmental claims only after satisfying more senior claims. In the all-too-common situation where there are no funds for environmental claims, publicly funded agencies pay for remediation. This allows polluters to avoid the costs of negative externalities generated from their operations. It also gives rise to a moral hazard since Redwater and its creditors enjoy the economic benefits of Redwater’s activities but not the consequences of environmental contamination. In effect, the BIA indirectly incentivizes pollution by having taxpayers subsidize it.

While there are legitimate reasons for denying priority status to environmental claims,[18] the “taxpayer pays” model is unlikely to garner support from Canadian taxpayers. Returning to a true “polluter pays” model can be achieved in one of two ways. The obvious method is for Parliament to amend section 14.06 of the BIA so that environmental claims can more easily gain priority. This, however, has yet to happen despite Parliament having ample opportunity. Such an amendment could also impact the accessibility and affordability of credit for industries prone to causing environmental contamination. The second method of achieving a “polluter pays” model is for provinces to avoid engaging in insolvency proceedings by collecting sufficient security from corporations engaging in activities that may damage the environment prior to their commencement of these activities.

Collecting security is not a new idea. This was the strategy adopted by the European Union post-Re Mineral Resources and Celtic Extraction,[19] and to an extent Canada already has similar schemes. In Alberta, the Orphan Well Association (“OWA”) collects a levy from industry participants so that it can fulfill its mandate to remediate oil and gas wells abandoned by bankrupt corporations.[20] However, this scheme is imperfect as illustrated by OWA’s $1.6 million deficit in 2016-2017.[21] Funding gaps are filled by taxpayers; for instance, the Alberta Government loaned $235 million to the OWA in March 2017.[22] Evidently, this security collection scheme needs to be revised,[23] but if run properly it has the potential to prevent the AER from needing to be a creditor and thus circumventing the need for environmental claims to have priority.

Conclusion

As Morawetz J noted in Nortel, “insolvency statutes such as the CCAA and the BIA do not mesh very well with environmental legislation.”[24] As Redwater shows, the Crown’s environmental claims (except under s 14.06(7) of the BIA) have no priority over secured creditors and provincial legislators cannot create priority if doing so interferes with the function of the BIA. Instead of trying to be prioritized creditors, provinces post-Redwater should proactively collect sufficient security from corporations involved in environmentally degrading activities. In doing so, provinces can ensure that polluters pay for their actions in the event they become bankrupt.

 


[1] Orphan Well Association v Grant Thornton Limited, 2017 ABCA 124 [Redwater].

[2] Benjamin Dachis, Blake Shaffer & Vincent Thivierge, “All’s Well that Ends Well: Addressing End-of-Life Liabilities for Oil and Gas Wells” (September 2017) Commentary No. 492, CD Howe Institute (web document) at 1 and 16, online: https://www.cdhowe.org/sites/default/files/attachments/research_papers/mixed/Commentary_%20492_0.pdf

(the $8.6 billion sum is an estimated worst-case “social cost”, where a “social cost” is the total sum of money required to fund the clean-up and is not necessarily entirely or in part funded by taxpayers).

[3] The AER estimated that the realizable net value of the 20 producing wells was $4.152 million and the realizable net value of the 107 non-producing wells was negative $4.705 million. Even if the entire value of the producing wells was put towards the remediation costs of the non-producing wells, there would still be a deficit of $553,000 (Redwater, supra note 1 at para 18).

[4] The three-part test outlined in Newfoundland and Labrador v AbitibiBowater Inc, 2012 SCC 67 at para 26 [AbitibiBowater] is as follows: (1) there must be a debt, liability or obligation to a creditor; (2) the debt, liability or obligation must be incurred at the relevant time in relation to the insolvency; (3) it must be possible to attach a monetary value to the debt, liability or obligatio n. Only the third branch of the three-part test was in dispute (Redwater, supra note 1 at para 73).

[5] AbitibiBowater, supra note 4 at para 33. Also see Redwater, supra note 1 at para 57 (“Parliament did not (as it could have) provide that provable claims are to be paid “subject to environmental claims, and next subject to the rights of secured creditors”).

[6] Typically, a remediated well is nothing more than a plugged hole. At this point, any surface rights to the oil and gas terminate, leaving little to no property of value for the Crown to secure (except in limited circumstances). See Redwater, supra note 1 at para 56.

[7] Ibid. See also Redwater, supra note 1 at paras 208 to 210.

[8] 1991 ABCA 181 [Northern Badger].

[9] Husky Oil Operations Ltd v Minister of National Revenue, [1995] 3 SCR 453.

[10] AbitibiBowater, supra note 4 at paras 26-27. The legislative amendments are highlighted in Redwater, supra note 1 at para 53.

[11] [2006] OJ No 3087 (Ont Sup Ct), aff’d 2007 ONCA 600.

[12] Ibid at para 57.

[13] [1999] 1 All ER 766 (Companies Court).

[14] Ibid at 757.

[15] [1999] EWCA Crim J0714-2 [Celtic Extraction].

[16] Ibid at para 42.

[17] The SCC granted leave to appeal and heard oral arguments on February 15, 2018. The SCC has not yet released its decision.

[18] A commonly cited reason by the Court in Redwater for not granting priority to environmental claims is that financing may become harder to secure for corporations engaging in activities that may cause environmental damage. In an industry like oil and gas exploitation, this could severely impact access to capital (see Redwater, supra note 1 at paras 20, 96 and 104).

[19] Blanca Mamutse and Valerie Fogleman, “Environmental Claims and Insolvent Companies: The Contrasting Approaches of the United Kingdom and the United States” (2013) 2 Brit J Am Legal Stud 579 at page 611.

[20] “Frequently Asked Questions: Who Funds the OWA’s Activities?” Orphan Well Association (website), online: http://orphanwell.ca/pg_faq.html.

[21] “Orphan Well Association 2016/17 Annual Report” (June 2017), Orphan Well Association (web document) at 53 and 57, online: http://orphanwell.ca/OWA%202016-17%20Ann%20Rpt%20Final.pdf. The need for sufficient funding is acute given the growth in the number of abandoned wells. At the time Redwater became insolvent, the OWA experienced a 720% year-over-year increase in abandoned wells (see Redwater, supra note 1 at para 144).

[22] “Cleanup boost for old oil and gas sites to create jobs” (18 May 2017), Alberta Government (website), online: https://www.alberta.ca/release.cfm?xID=4694019572224-D73F-7246-523724CDE750729C.

[23] This is an issue that is not limited to the oil and gas industry. The Auditor General of Alberta has thrice (most recently in 2015) made recommendations to the Alberta Government that there is a funding shortfall in its security program for environmental disturbances caused by mining: “Report of the Auditor General of Canada” (July 2015), Auditor General of Alberta  (web document) at 25,online: https://www.oag.ab.ca/webfiles/reports/OAG%20Report%20July%202015.pdf.

[24] Nortel Networks Corporation (Re), 2012 ONSC 1213 at para 101.