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February 27, 2025

Big corporations are getting away with catastrophic air pollution—putting Canadians at risk

Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain
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Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

Millions of kilograms of toxic pollutants, annually and environmental laws that aren't being diligently enforced. This is the troubling picture that emerged when we, a group of environmental researchers, investigated in Canada.

Federal and share responsibility for regulating air pollution. However, environmental laws and regulations are only useful if they're properly enforced. Our research shows Canada needs to take greater action in enforcing the for air pollution. According to this principle, those who produce pollution should pay for cleaning up any environmental damage.

We in Canada of air pollution enforcement actions. We scoured all available sources, creating a database of more than 2,200 enforcement actions that took place between 2000 and 2020 from eight provinces as well as the federal government. This helped us identify patterns in the way air pollution laws were being enforced.

Broken rules

One of the disappointing patterns we saw is that the majority of enforcement actions in our dataset—63%—were against individuals for offenses such as illegal campfires. Meanwhile, only one-third of enforcement actions were brought against companies—including those that had into Canada's air, or caused catastrophic emissions offenses (such as the ).

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Even in the uncommon cases where rules were enforced against , the penalties imposed were extremely lenient. These penalties amounted to barely a slap on the wrist for repeat industrial polluters.

For example, the mining corporation in Québec for breaking air pollution laws in 2013. This fine equated to only 0.00023% of the company's annual revenue. To put this into perspective, if a Canadian family earning the after taxes was given a 0.00023% fine, this would equate to $14.47.

It's not surprising, then, that this company would go on to less than one month later. They also violated these laws again in 2016 and 2019.

Even the relatively small fine of $150,000 is well above the median fine for industrial air polluters. According to our study, fines ranged from $2,500 to $10,000 for most types of offenses—including excess emissions or violating an environmental standard. This is less than some people would be fined for . These fines are less than 1% of the maximum penalties permitted by law for environmental offenses—which range .

Another concerning pattern our study revealed is that some large industrial polluters are repeat offenders. While indicate there should be increasingly strict enforcement applied in these cases, this doesn't appear to be the general practice. Instead, chronic law-breakers tended to receive multiple warning letters—not increasingly large fines or prosecutions.

For instance, over the last five years, were reportedly issued against INEOS—one of the world's largest chemical production companies. These orders were issued so the company would address its benzene emissions. This toxic chemical is .

Following federal and provincial orders to reduce benzene emissions in 2024, INEOS decided to . The company was never fined for its toxic pollution.

Enforcement actions don't seem to be taking into account the way are jeopardized by industrial air pollution. who live near large industrial facilities are particularly at risk of harm.

We found that on average, businesses were generally fined less for committing an actual pollution violation—such as illegally dumping large quantities of contaminants into the air—than they were for failing to notify an enforcement agency that they'd committed a violation.

Improving environmental enforcement

Canadian enforcement agencies are failing to properly hold high-risk offenders and repeat offenders to account.

But positive change is possible. Going forward, there are three key actions enforcement agencies should take:

By properly enforcing environmental regulations, Canada can protect the public from the perils of poor air quality. This would also be a vital step towards realizing everyone's —a right that was recently recognized in an amendment to the .

Provided by The Conversation

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Get Instant Summarized Text (GIST)

In Canada, enforcement of air pollution laws is inadequate, with most actions targeting individuals rather than large corporations responsible for significant emissions. Penalties for corporate offenders are minimal, often less than 1% of the maximum allowed by law, and repeat offenders frequently receive only warnings. To improve, enforcement agencies should impose higher fines, ensure transparency, and focus on high-risk polluters to better protect public health and the environment.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.