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This year’s Africa Energy Forum presents a unique opportunity for African collaboration
In the rural village of Gwanda, Zimbabwe, a mother walks several kilometres each day to find firewood so she can cook for her children.
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Canada | Publication | June 13, 2025
Upcoming changes to federal labour laws will prohibit employer engagement of replacement workers during labour disputes and will require employers and unions to negotiate essential services that will be maintained during work stoppages.
On June 20, 2025, Bill C-58, An Act to amend the Canada Labour Code and the Canada Industrial Relations Board Regulations, 2012 will come into force. This legislation provides for significant changes to the law of federally regulated collective bargaining and labour disputes. As of that date, all federally regulated employers:
Both of these changes will require employers to revisit their approach to collective bargaining and labour disruptions. Negotiation of maintenance of services agreements will become a required part of the bargaining process, though disputes will likely still arise as to the scope of essential services. The ban on replacement workers may have a greater practical impact, particularly in industries where replacement workers have, in the past, been a viable means of business continuity during work stoppages. Protracted strikes or lockouts may now be more costly. Even employers who could not operate during a dispute but who continue some activities (maintenance, shut down, customer support, etc.) will need to consider who can be used to do what work after a dispute commences.
Replacement worker bans represent a shift in bargaining power away from employers and toward unions in the collective bargaining process. Should bargaining reach an impasse, a work stoppage represents not just a potential reduction in work, but potentially a total cessation of bargaining unit work. Any further expansion of replacement worker bans would be a significant development for employers.
Since the June 2024 adoption of Bill C-58, there have been two further expansions of replacement worker bans in Canada:
The outcome of this litigation may affect the territorial reach of replacement worker bans in other jurisdictions, including the federal jurisdiction. While the federal jurisdiction exists throughout Canada, similar reasoning might fetter an employer’s ability to relocate federally regulated bargaining unit work outside Canada during a work stoppage.
As of June 20, 2025, there will be four Canadian jurisdictions with replacement worker bans in place, and potentially an expansive interpretation of the territorial reach of those bans. Further developments in this area should be of significant interest to employers with unionized workforces, throughout Canada.
Our team continues to monitor new developments in Canadian labour legislation and case law and will publish further updates as developments arise.
Publication
In the rural village of Gwanda, Zimbabwe, a mother walks several kilometres each day to find firewood so she can cook for her children.
Publication
Southern Africa is a key focus of attention at the present time, as it faces a perfect storm of an energy emergency due to hydropower generation being severely impacted by reduced water levels due to droughts whilst the demand of its regional miners for clean baseload power rapidly accelerates.
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