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International arbitration report
In this edition, we focused on the Shanghai International Economic and Trade Arbitration Commission’s (SHIAC) new arbitration rules, which take effect January 1, 2024.
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Canada | Publication | January 2019
In a 5:2 decision issued earlier today, the Supreme Court of Canada overturned the Alberta Court of Appeal’s decision in Orphan Well Association v Grant Thornton Ltd. (also known as Redwater).
The practical effect of today’s decision is that, in an insolvency, the Alberta Energy Regulator (AER) may require the satisfaction of abandonment and reclamation liabilities from the debtor’s estate, thereby reducing what is available for distribution even to prior-ranking secured creditors.
A majority of five of the seven judges who heard the SCC appeal overturned the Alberta Court of Appeal’s decision, thus recognizing that a provincial regulator (the AER specifically) can use its regulatory authority over licensing and license transfers to ensure the satisfaction of abandonment and reclamation liabilities before the marketable assets of an insolvent company are sold to satisfy the claims of creditors, including secured creditors.
The following determinations were key to the majority’s decision:
Ultimately, the majority accepted that Alberta’s regulatory regime could coexist and not conflict with the BIA.
Two judges dissented, identifying an operational conflict between the provincial regulatory regime and the BIA and a frustration of the BIA’s purpose, thus rendering the provincial regulatory regime ineffective in the circumstances.
Alberta Treasury Branches had a receiver appointed over Redwater Energy Corporation. The receiver only took control of a fraction of Redwater’s licensed oil and gas properties because the majority were near the end of their productive lives and non-producing. The AER then issued closure and abandonment orders for all of Redwater’s licensed properties, including the subset that the receiver had taken control of and intended to sell. The receiver was subsequently appointed as trustee in bankruptcy. The trustee then purported to disclaim the unsaleable assets.
The AER and Orphan Well Association (OWA) applied to challenge the disclaimer and the trustee applied for court approval of a sale process that excluded the disclaimed assets. The fundamental issue was whether a provincial regulator like the AER could interfere with license transfers for Redwater’s marketable assets as a means of compelling the satisfaction of abandonment and reclamation liabilities associated with Redwater’s unmarketable assets.
At first instance, Wittmann C.J. held in part that the AER’s closure and abandonment orders had frustrated the federal disclaimer power under s. 14.06 of the BIA. The doctrine of federal paramountcy was therefore engaged, rendering the AER’s orders inoperative to the extent they conflicted with the federal legislation.
Wittmann C.J.’s decision was upheld by the Alberta Court of Appeal in a 2:1 split decision. The majority agreed that federal paramountcy rendered the AER’s closure and abandonment orders ineffective: “It follows that under the proper interpretation of the BIA, the Regulator cannot insist that the Trustee devote substantial parts of the bankrupt estate in satisfaction of the environmental claims in priority to the claims of the secured creditor.”
Martin JA (as she then was) dissented.
The AER and OWA pursued a further appeal that was heard by the SCC on February 15, 2018. The SCC allowed the appeal earlier today.
Howard A. Gorman, QC and D. Aaron Stephenson from Norton Rose Fulbright Canada LLP acted as counsel to the intervener, the Canadian Bankers’ Association.
Publication
In this edition, we focused on the Shanghai International Economic and Trade Arbitration Commission’s (SHIAC) new arbitration rules, which take effect January 1, 2024.
Publication
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