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EPBC Act reforms imminent: Setting the scene for major changes
For the second year in a row, environmental reforms are at the top of the national legislative agenda.
Global | Publication | October 2017
Under the impetus of the Uniform Law Conference of Canada (ULCC), Ontario recently became the first province to update its international commercial arbitration regime since the initial wave of arbitration legislation following Canada’s accession in 1986 to the New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards (New York Convention).
The ULCC, a century-old institute composed of provincial and federal government representatives and charged with promoting uniformity of the law across Canada, developed the first version of the Uniform International Commercial Arbitration Act (Uniform Act) in 1986. The Uniform Act was subsequently adopted by Ontario (in 1990) and many other Canadian provinces, occasionally with minor modifications.
Over the last decade, however, the need for modernizing this legislation became increasingly acute. Growing confusion regarding discrepancies between and among provincial and federal international commercial arbitration Acts along with the 2006 amendments to the UNCITRAL Model Law led to the development and adoption of a new Uniform Act in April 2014 (2014 Uniform Act). Until recently, the 2014 Uniform Act had not been implemented in any province.
Building on the ULCC’s 2014 Uniform Act, Ontario updated its international arbitration regime with the adoption of a new International Commercial Arbitration Act (Ontario ICA Act), in force from 22 March 2017. A key feature of the Ontario ICA Act – and one which may come as a surprise to many international arbitration practitioners – is that Ontario has only now formally incorporated the New York Convention into its legislation. The 2017 Ontario ICA Act also clarifies that the New York Convention applies equally to arbitral awards and agreements made before or after the entry into force of the Act. Doubts over the applicability of the New York Convention resulting from the repeal in 1990 of the Foreign Arbitral Awards Act have now been permanently dispelled.
Like the 2014 Uniform Act, the Ontario ICA Act also implements the 2006 amended version of the UNCITRAL Model Law. Key changes include the expansion of the notion of “writing” as a requirement for the validity of arbitration agreements and the clarification of the scope and availability of interim relief from an arbitral tribunal – the Ontario ICA Act now expressly recognizes an arbitral tribunal’s power to order interim measures, including injunctive relief and security for costs, and provides for such orders to be recognized and enforced by the Superior Court of Justice.
Finally, the reform of Ontario’s international arbitration regime also served as an opportunity for Ontario to address the controversial 2010 Canadian Supreme Court ruling in Yugraneft Corp. v Rexx Management, 2010 SCC 19. In that case, the Supreme Court held that enforcement of foreign arbitral awards was subject to the standard two-year limitation period applicable to any cause of action in Alberta, rather than the ten-year limitation period for enforcing judgments. The Ontario ICA Act now imposes a ten-year limitation period for enforcing arbitral awards. This and the other changes implemented in the new Ontario ICA Act are meant to send an unequivocal signal that international arbitration is not a second-class form of dispute resolution and that it will be afforded utmost protection by courts of law in Ontario.
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For the second year in a row, environmental reforms are at the top of the national legislative agenda.
Publication
A range of significant reforms to NSW’s key environmental laws has just been passed by the NSW Parliament, and our responses to the FAQ’s about the Environmental Legislation Amendment Act 2025 (the Amendment Act) are set out below:
Publication
The State Development Bill 2025 (WA) (the Bill) proposes to provide the State Development Minister (currently the Hon Roger Cook MLA, Premier) and the Coordinator General (CG) (an existing office with a new statutory role) with a range of powers to coordinate and fast-track approvals for strategically important developments, all with the aim of securing investment in areas the WA Government considers are key to WA’s future. If passed, the key reforms in the Bill will come into force on a date to be proclaimed.
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