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This document was
prepared by the staff of the Parliamentary Research Branch to provide Canadian
Parliamentarians with plain language background and analysis of proposed government
legislation. Legislative summaries are not government documents. They have no official
legal status and do not constitute legal advice or opinion. Please note, the Legislative
Summary describes the bill as of the date shown at the beginning of the document. For the
latest published version of the bill, please consult the parliamentary internet site at www.parl.gc.ca.
LS-353E
BILL C-15: AN ACT TO AMEND THE
INTERNATIONAL BOUNDARY WATERS TREATY ACT
Prepared by:
David Johansen
Law and Government Division
30 November 1999
LEGISLATIVE HISTORY OF BILL C-15
HOUSE OF COMMONS |
SENATE |
Bill Stage |
Date |
Bill Stage |
Date |
First Reading: |
22 November 1999 |
First Reading: |
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Second Reading: |
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Second Reading: |
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Committee Report: |
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Committee Report: |
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Report Stage: |
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Report Stage: |
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Third Reading: |
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Third Reading: |
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Royal Assent:
Statutes of Canada
N.B. Any substantive changes in this Legislative Summary which have
been made since the preceding issue are indicated in bold print.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
BACKGROUND
DESCRIPTION AND ANALYSIS
A. Background
B.
Definitions
C. Licences
D.
Prohibition on Removal of Boundary Waters
E. General
F. Powers of the
Minister of Foreign Affairs
G.
Regulations
H. Offences
and Punishment
I.
Injunctions
J. Coming into
Force
COMMENTARY
BILL C-15: AN ACT TO AMEND THE
INTERNATIONAL
BOUNDARY WATERS TREATY ACT
BACKGROUND
On 22
November 1999, Bill C-15, an Act to amend the International Boundary Waters Treaty Act,
was introduced in the House of Commons by the Minister of Foreign Affairs, the Hon. Lloyd
Axworthy. The bill would provide for a clearer Act and more effective implementation of
the 1909 Treaty relating to Boundary Waters and Questions arising along the Boundary
between Canada and the United States (commonly referred to as the Boundary Waters
Treaty) by: a) prohibiting the bulk removal of boundary waters from the water basins
in which they are located; b) requiring persons to obtain licences from the Minister of
Foreign Affairs for water-related projects in boundary or transboundary waters that would
affect the natural level or flow of waters on the United States side of the border; and c)
providing clear sanctions and penalties for violation. The prohibition on boundary water
removals would apply principally to the Great Lakes but would also affect other boundary
waters, such as part of the St. Lawrence River, the St. Croix and Upper St. John Rivers,
and the Lake of the Woods. At the time the bill was introduced in the House, Mr. Axworthy
stated:
Were
taking decisive action within our jurisdiction to protect critical boundary waters for
future generations. These amendments will give us the authority to prevent the damage that
bulk water removals can cause our environment.
The
amendments to the International Boundary Waters Treaty Act proposed in Bill C-15
are part of a larger three-pronged strategy announced by the federal government on
10 February 1999 to prohibit bulk water removals, including those for export,
from all Canadian water basins. The provinces have primary responsibility for the
management of water resources; however, the Boundary Waters Treaty gives the
federal government clear jurisdiction over boundary waters to the extent stipulated
in the Treaty. Pursuant to section 132 of the Constitution Act, 1867, only the
federal government has the authority to fulfil the Treatys obligations with respect
to boundary waters.
In
addition to proposing amendments to the International Boundary Waters Treaty Act
and thereby prohibiting bulk water removal from Canadian boundary waters, including the
Great Lakes, the federal strategy also announced that there would be a joint reference,
with the United States, to the International Joint Commission (IJC) to study the effects
of water consumption, diversion and removal (including for export) from boundary waters,
with an initial emphasis on the Great Lakes. In its interim report Protection of the
Waters of the Great Lakes, released in August 1999, the IJC was generally supportive
of an environmental approach. A final report is expected to be submitted to the
governments by February 2000. Among other things, the interim report concluded that:
"Provisions of
the [NAFTA and WTO] agreements, including the [GATT] do not prevent Canada and the U.S.
from taking measures to protect their water resources and preserve the integrity of the
Great Lakes Basin ecosystem so long as there is no discrimination by decision makers
against individuals from other countries in the application of those measures. Canada and
the U.S. cannot be compelled by trade laws to endanger the waters of the Great Lakes
ecosystem."
The IJC recommended
that governments should exercise caution and called for a moratorium on any bulk water
removals from the Great Lakes, pending its final report.
The
third part of the federal governments strategy included a proposal to develop,
jointly with the governments of the provinces and territories, a Canada-wide accord to
prohibit bulk water removals from Canadian watersheds. The accord would represent a
commitment by all jurisdictions (federal, provincial and territorial) to act through
legislation, regulations or policy. In the case of jurisdictions with measures already in
place, the accord would re-affirm their commitment. As an interim measure, the federal
government urged the provinces and territories to institute a moratorium preventing bulk
removals from watersheds, including those for export, until such time as the accord is in
place. The federal government is currently seeking the endorsement of the accord by the
provinces and territories. This endorsement would complement the amendments to the International
Boundary Waters Treaty Act proposed in Bill C-15 by extending protection to all of
Canadas waters. At the time of the introduction of Bill C-15 in the House, the
Minister of the Environment, the Hon. David Anderson, stated in part:
I
will be seeking agreement on a Canada-wide accord for the prohibition of bulk water
removal from all of Canadas major watersheds when I meet with my provincial and
territorial colleagues later this month. This is an environmental issue to be decided by
Canadians. We will stop bulk removals at the source, not at the border.
DESCRIPTION AND ANALYSIS
A. Background
The Boundary
Waters Treaty ("the Treaty"), signed by Great Britain (on behalf of Canada)
and the United States in 1909, established principles and procedures to prevent and
resolve disputes, primarily those concerning the quantity and quality of boundary waters
between Canada and the United States. To help implement its provisions, the Treaty also
created the International Joint Commission (IJC). Through the Treaty, Canada and the U.S.
are mutually obliged to protect natural levels or flows of waters shared by the two
countries. With some exceptions, Article III of the Treaty provides that there shall be no
use, obstruction or diversion of boundary waters on either side of the boundary line
affecting the natural flow on the other side of the line, except by the authority of the
United States or Canada within their respective jurisdictions and with the approval of the
IJC. According to Article IV of the Treaty, the countries agree that, except in cases
provided for by special agreement between them, or unless with the approval of the IJC,
they will not permit, on their respective sides of the boundary, the construction or
maintenance of any remedial or protective works, or any dams or other obstructions, in
waters flowing from boundary waters, or in waters at a lower level than the boundary in
rivers flowing across the boundary, resulting in a rise in the natural level of waters on
the other side of the boundary.
Parliament
enacted the International Boundary Waters Treaty Act in 1911 to implement the
Treaty. The Act gives the federal government jurisdiction over boundary waters, such as
the Great Lakes, in order to fulfil Canadas obligation under the Treaty not to
affect unilaterally the level and flow of waters on the U.S. side of the boundary. The
bill consists of two clauses. Clause 1 would add proposed sections 10 to 26 to the Act,
while clause 2 concerns the coming into force of the bill.
B. Definitions
Proposed
section 10 would define certain terms for purposes of proposed sections 11 to 26 of the
Act.
The
term "boundary waters" would mean boundary waters as defined in the Treaty:
For
the purposes of this treaty, boundary waters are defined as the waters from main shore to
main shore of the lakes and rivers and connecting waterways, or the portions thereof,
along which the international boundary between the United States and the Dominion of
Canada passes, including all bays, arms, and inlets thereof, but not including tributary
waters which in their natural channels would flow into such lakes, rivers, and waterways,
or waters flowing from such lakes, rivers, and waterways, or the waters of rivers flowing
across the boundary.
For
example, boundary waters include the Lake of the Woods, the Great Lakes, the section of
the St. Lawrence River from the outlet of Lake Ontario to Cornwall, Ontario
Massena, New York, the Upper St. John River (Quebec/New Brunswick) and the St. Croix River
(New Brunswick). A river that runs along the boundary, as opposed to crossing it, is a
boundary water (for example, a section of the St. Lawrence River).
A
"licence" would be a licence issued under proposed section 16.
"Minister" would mean the Minister of Foreign Affairs and "water
basin" would be defined in the regulations.
C. Licences
The
amendments to the International Boundary Waters Treaty Act proposed in Bill C-15
would formalize a 90-year process under which the federal government (and the IJC, through
its own process) has, under the terms of the Boundary Waters Treaty, informally
examined and approved or rejected certain projects in boundary or transboundary waters
that would have the effect of altering the natural level or flow of waters on the United
States side of the border. These projects have always required federal approval. The
federal government has in this way met its international obligations under the Treaty. In
light of increasing pressures on freshwater resources, however, the federal government is
now of the view that stronger protections are required and that the licensing arrangements
need to be formalized. Hence, Bill C-15 proposes that these projects would now require a
licence from the Minister of Foreign Affairs (proposed section 16).
Except
in accordance with such a licence, no person would be permitted to use, obstruct or divert
any boundary waters in a manner that affected, or would be likely to affect, the natural
level or flow of the boundary waters on the U.S. side of the international boundary
(proposed section 11(1)). This proposed provision would not apply, however, in respect of
the ordinary use of waters for domestic or sanitary purposes (in accordance with Article
III of the Treaty) or in the cases provided for in the regulations (proposed section
11(2)). Traditional uses, such as agricultural and industrial withdrawals that remained
within the basin, would not be covered by the licensing system. The above provision would
more effectively implement Article III of the Boundary Waters Treaty.
Also,
except in accordance with a licence issued under proposed section 16, no person would be
permitted to construct or maintain any remedial or protective work or any dam or other
obstruction in waters flowing from boundary waters, or in downstream waters of rivers
flowing across the international boundary, where the effect would, or would be likely to,
raise the natural level of waters on the U.S. side of the international boundary (proposed
section 12(1)). The above would not apply in cases provided for in the regulations
(proposed section 12(2)). The provision involves neither water removal nor boundary
waters. It would more effectively implement the first paragraph of Article IV of the
Treatry.
D. Prohibition on Removal of
Boundary Waters
The
federal government believes that a definite prohibition on bulk water removal from
boundary waters is necessary to protect the ecological integrity of these shared basins.
Hence, the bill provides that, notwithstanding proposed section 11, no person would be
permitted to remove boundary waters from the water basin in which they were located
(proposed section 13(1)). For the purposes of the above provision and the application of
the Treaty, removing water from boundary waters and taking it outside its water basin
would be deemed, given the cumulative effect of such removals, as affecting the natural
level or flow of the boundary waters on the U.S. side of the international boundary
(proposed section 13(2)). The above would not apply in cases provided for in the
regulations (proposed section 13(3)); possible examples might be ballast water, water
required for short-term humanitarian purposes and water used in the production of food or
beverages.
According
to government background documentation, the above proposed prohibition would recognize
that bulk removal of water out of drainage basins should be managed differently from
removal of water for use within the basin. Bulk removal involves the permanent loss of
water from the basin. In view of the fact that the ecosystems and communities within the
basin are dependent on this supply of water, bulk removal is considered to represent an
unsustainable use of the resource. The government maintains that a prohibition on bulk
removal of boundary waters is also consistent with our international trade obligations as
set out in the 1993 Joint Declaration by the governments of Canada, Mexico and the United
States. At the time, the three countries stated that water in its natural state is not a
good or a product and is not subject to any trade agreement, including the NAFTA.
E. General
The
licensing system and prohibition contained in proposed sections 11 to 13 would be binding
on both the federal and provincial Crowns (proposed section 14).
Proposed
sections 11 to 13 would not apply in respect of uses, obstructions or diversions that were
in existence immediately before these provisions came into force, but would apply in
respect of such uses, obstructions or diversions that were significantly changed after
these provisions came into force (proposed section 15).
F. Powers of the Minister of Foreign
Affairs
Subject
to the regulations, the Minister would be empowered to, on application, issue, renew or
amend a licence required under the Act, subject to any terms or conditions the Minister
considered appropriate (proposed section 16). It is expected that the licensing system
would be consistent with existing informal procedures relating to the required approval of
water-related projects in boundary waters.
A
licence would not be transferable except with the consent of the Minister (proposed
section 17). The Minister could suspend or revoke any licence whenever he or she believed
on reasonable grounds that the licensee had contravened the Act or a condition of the
licence; however, the Minister would first have to give the licensee written notice of the
reasons for the suspension or revocation and a reasonable opportunity to provide an
explanation (proposed section 18(1)). The Minister could also suspend or revoke a licence
with the consent of, or on application by, the licensee (proposed section 18(2)).
If a
person contravened proposed section 11(1), 12(1) or 13(1), the Minister could either: a)
order the person to remove or alter any obstruction or work to which the contravention
related; or b) order the person to refrain from proceeding with any construction or other
work, or to cease the use or diversion, to which the contravention related (proposed
section 19(1)). If the person failed to comply with such an order, the Minister could
remove or alter the obstruction or work, or anything used in relation to it, or order it
to be forfeited to the federal Crown (proposed section 19(2)). Anything so forfeited could
be removed, destroyed or otherwise disposed of as the Minister directed (proposed section
19(3)). The Ministers cost of removing or altering anything under proposed section
19(2) and the costs relating to the removal, destruction or disposition of anything
forfeited under proposed section 19(3), less any sum that might be realized from its
disposition, would be recoverable in a court of competent jurisdiction by the federal
Crown from the person who had contravened the order as a debt due to the Crown (proposed
section 19(4)).
According
to proposed section 20, the Minister could, with the approval of the Governor in Council,
enter into an agreement or arrangement with the government of one or more provinces
respecting the activities referred to in proposed sections 11 to 13. The provision would
thus enable co-operative understandings with the provinces in order to reduce duplication
and costs in connection with reviewing projects under the licensing/prohibition scheme.
G. Regulations
The
amendments to the International Boundary Waters Treaty Act proposed in Bill C-15
would provide for the power to make regulations, something not provided in the current
Act. According to proposed section 21(1), the Governor in Council (Cabinet), on the
recommendation of the Minister, would be given broad powers to make regulations, including
regulations specifying what would constitute a use, obstruction, diversion, or work for
purposes of the Act; defining a water basin and any word or expression in proposed
sections 11 to 26 that is not already defined in the Act; prescribing classes of licences;
prescribing the procedure governing applications for licences; respecting the form of
licences; prescribing licensing fees; prescribing the duration of licences; respecting the
renewal and amendment of licences; prescribing uses, obstructions, diversions and works
for which a licence could not be issued; and generally for carrying out the purposes and
provisions of the Act.
H. Offences and Punishment
A
person who contravened proposed section 11(1), 12(1) or 13(1) would be guilty of an
offence and liable: a) on conviction on indictment, to a fine not exceeding $1,000,000 or
to imprisonment for a term of not more than three years, or to both; or b) on summary
conviction, to a fine not exceeding $300,000 or to imprisonment for a term of not more
than six months, or to both (proposed section 22(1)). Any such contravention that was
continued on more than one day would be deemed to constitute a separate offence for each
day during which the violation was committed or continued (proposed section 22(2)).
If a
person were convicted of an offence of having contravened proposed section 11(1), 12(1) or
13(1), the convicting court could, if satisfied that the person had thereby acquired
monetary benefits, order the person to pay a fine (in addition to the fine imposed under
proposed section 22) in an amount equal to those monetary benefits (proposed section 23).
An
officer, director, agent or mandatary of a corporation who directed, authorized assented
to, acquiesced in or participated in an offence committed by the corporation would be a
party to and guilty of the offence and would be liable on conviction to the punishment
provided for the offence, regardless of whether the corporation had been prosecuted
(proposed section 24).
In
any prosecution of an offence under the Act, it would be sufficient proof of the offence
to establish that it was committed by an employee, agent or mandatary of the accused,
regardless of whether the employee, agent or mandatary was identified or had been
prosecuted for the offence, unless the accused exercised all due diligence to prevent the
commission of the offence (proposed section 25).
I. Injunctions
On
application by the Minister, a court of competent jurisdiction that believed a person had
performed, was about to perform, or would be likely to perform any act or thing
constituting, or directed toward the commission of, an offence under the Act, could issue
an injunction ordering the person: a) to refrain from doing any such act or thing, or b)
to do any act or thing that the court believed might prevent the commission of the offence
(proposed section 26(1)). However, no injunction could be issued unless 48 hours
notice had been given to the party or parties named in the application, or unless the
urgency of the situation was such that delay until the notice had been served would not be
in the public interest (proposed section 26(2)).
J. Coming into Force
According
to clause 2 of the bill, clause 1 (proposed sections 10 to 26 of the International
Boundary Waters Treaty Act), or any of the proposed sections to be enacted by clause
1, would come into force on a day or days to be fixed by order of the Governor in Council.
COMMENTARY(1)
On 23
November 1999, the day after Bill C-15 was introduced in the House of Commons, Mr. Bill
Blaikie, M.P. drew the attention of the government to the following motion, which had been
adopted by the House on 9 February 1999:
That,
in the opinion of this House, the government should, in co-operation with the provinces,
place an immediate moratorium on the export of bulk freshwater shipments and inter-basin
transfers and should introduce legislation to prohibit bulk freshwater exports and
inter-basin transfers, and should not be a party to any international agreement that
compels us to export freshwater against our will, in order to assert Canadas
sovereign right to protect, preserve and conserve our freshwater resources for future
generations.
Noting
that the proposed legislation did not accurately reflect this motion, Mr. Blaikie asked
the government why it was now abandoning "its commitment to a national ban on bulk
water exports
. which it supported only short months ago?
Why are the Liberals
in full denial about the fact that they cannot act the way they said they would act
because of NAFTA?"
The
Minister of Foreign Affairs, the Hon. Lloyd Axworthy, responded in part:
the legislation does provide for a prohibition of bulk removal. What it does not do is
follow the recommendation of the hon. member and some of his party on the west coast,
which is to turn this into a trade issue which would result in a series of trade actions
that would totally impede the capacity of Canada to protect its waters.
The
government has specifically addressed this issue in its background documentation on Bill
C-15. The government has publicly stated that it agrees that measures need to be taken to
protect the integrity of Canadas water resources but feels that this would be best
achieved by its strategy of prohibiting the bulk water removal from all major drainage
basins in Canada. In the governments view, such a prohibition would be better than
an export ban because "it is more comprehensive, environmentally sound, respects
constitutional responsibilities and is consistent with Canadas international trade
obligations
. In this way water is protected in its water basin before the issue of
exporting arises." The government views this as an environmental protection
measure of general application, aimed at preserving the integrity of ecosystems. It would
protect water at its source from bulk removal outside the water basin by any party,
Canadian or foreign. As noted earlier, under the Canada-wide accord for which the federal
government is seeking endorsement of all provinces and territories, each level of
government would have a responsibility to take appropriate action to prohibit bulk water
removal from waters under its jurisdiction. In this way, water would be regulated in its
natural state, before it became a commercial good or a saleable commodity. The
federal government maintains that this would be consistent with Canadas
international trade obligations and the statement made by the three NAFTA countries in
1993 that:
The
NAFTA creates no rights to the natural water resources of any Party to the Agreement.
Unless water in any form has entered into commerce and become a good or a product, it is
not covered by the provisions of any trade agreement, including the NAFTA. And nothing in
the NAFTA would oblige any NAFTA Party to either exploit its water for commercial use, or
to begin exporting water in any form. Water in its natural state in lakes, river,
reservoirs, aquifers, waterbasins and the like is not a good or product, is not traded,
and therefore is not and has never been subject to the terms of any trade agreement.
In
response to the argument that it should place an outright legislative ban on all water
exports from Canada, the federal government claims that this apparently quick and simple
solution "does not focus on the environmental dimension, has possible constitutional
limitations, and may be vulnerable to a trade challenge." The government maintains
that an export ban "would focus on water once it has become a good and therefore
subject to international trade agreements. Because these agreements limit the ability of
governments to control the export of goods, a ban on exports is likely to be contrary to
Canadas international trade obligations. This contrasts sharply with the federal
governments approach."
The
federal government has noted that its strategy is consistent with the conclusions on trade
issues reached by the International Joint Commission (IJC) in its interim report on the
protection of the waters of the Great Lakes (August 1999). The IJC stated that "it
would appear unlikely that water in its natural state (e.g., in lake, river or aquifer) is
included within the scope of any of these trade agreements since it is not a product or
good
" As well, the government points out that, at an IJC public hearing in
Ottawa on 13 October 1999, two independent trade law experts endorsed the federal
governments views on all major trade policy issues.
In an
essay entitled "Ottawas Leaky Water Policy," published in the Globe
and Mail on 18 November 1999, Maude Barlow, national chairperson of the Council of
Canadians,(2) noted that the federal and
provincial Ministers of the Environment would be meeting shortly in Kananaskis, Alberta,
to discuss the federal governments proposal for a Canada-wide accord on bulk water
removal from watersheds in Canada. She urged the provinces " not [to] sign
this document if they care about protecting Canadas water from commercial
export." She stated in part:
The
federal government is trying to pass the buck on its responsibility. A voluntary accord
would be just that voluntary and would not bind any province in any
meaningful way to protect its water resources now or in the future. As well, although
responsibility for fresh water comes largely under provincial jurisdiction, international
trade is the domain of the federal government. Only the federal government has the
jurisdiction to impose a meaningful national ban on water exports and only the federal
government can deal with the trade threat it has unleashed on the provinces.
Ms.
Barlow argues that certain key provisions of the NAFTA place Canadas water at risk.
She maintains that if a single province revoked its ban and began exporting water, bans in
other provinces would become subject to challenges from companies wanting to buy Canadian
water. She maintains that the federal government "
needs to bring in a full,
binding, federal ban on bulk-water exports. And it must work to exempt water from
pernicious trade deals [such as the NAFTA and GATT] that would privatize, commodify and
put our precious water on the open global market for the highest bidder."
The
federal government takes the opposite view, arguing that nothing in Canadas
international trade obligations would require approval to be given to future projects for
the bulk removal of water for export, just because previous projects of this kind had
received approval. Noting that Canadian governments, federal and provincial, retain full
sovereignty over Canadian waters, the government declares that, "the key point is
that water in its natural state is not a good, and therefore is not subject to trade
obligations." It maintains that "From the standpoint of trade obligations, the
fact that a government has allowed the extraction and transformation of some water into a
good, including for export, does not mean it (or another government within Canada) must
allow the extraction and transformation of other water into a good in the future."
According to the government, any possible precedent arising out of a water export project
would be limited to the province involved and would result from the particular legislation
that permitted removal for export, and not from trade agreements. The federal government
maintains that a province could even change its legislation to prevent bulk removal, as
long as it did so without discrimination on the basis of nationality in treatment of the
applicant (as an investor).
According
to press reports, at the meeting of the Canadian Council of Ministers of the Environment
held in Kananaskis, Alberta, on 29 and 30 November 1999, all the Environment Ministers
expressed their support for the protection of Canadas freshwater from commercial
exploitation. Though a number of provinces, including Alberta and British Columbia, had
earlier imposed bans on the bulk removal of water from water basins under their
jurisdiction, five provinces refused to endorse the accord. British Columbia, Alberta and
Quebec raised specific objections, while Manitoba and Saskatchewan said they wanted more
time to study the accord. B.C.s Environment Minister pointed out that the accord
does not include a federal ban on water exports, something she believes is necessary in
order to put water out of the reach of corporations intent on using international trade
law to secure export rights. Albertas Environment Minister commented that he did not
like the preamble to the accord, which suggests action needs to be taken on the basis of
the "precautionary principle." Quebec objected on constitutional grounds,
arguing that the federal governments action to protect international boundary waters
interfered with the provinces control of resources. The federal Environment
Minister, the Hon. David Anderson, told reporters that he will try to address provincial
concerns in time for the Ministers meeting to reconsider the accord in the spring of
2000.
(1) A more detailed discussion of some of these
following points can be found in: David Johansen, Water Exports and the NAFTA,
Library of Parliament,
PRB
99-5E, 8 March 1999.
(2) The Council of Canadians is a citizens
watchdog organization founded in 1985 which came to prominence in its fight against free
trade.
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