Canada Gazette, Part I, Volume 148, Number 28: GOVERNMENT NOTICES
July 12, 2014
DEPARTMENT OF THE ENVIRONMENT
CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION ACT, 1999
Ministerial Condition No. EAU-740
Ministerial Condition
(Paragraph 84(1)(a) of the Canadian Environmental Protection Act, 1999)
Whereas the Minister of the Environment and the Minister of Health have assessed information pertaining to the substance androsta-5, 16-dien-3-ol, 17-(3-pyridinyl)-, acetate (ester), (3β)-, Chemical Abstracts Service No. 154229-18-2;
And whereas the ministers suspect that the substance is toxic or capable of becoming toxic within the meaning of section 64 of the Canadian Environmental Protection Act, 1999,
The Minister of the Environment, pursuant to paragraph 84(1)(a) of the Canadian Environmental Protection Act, 1999, hereby permits the manufacture or import of the substance in accordance with the conditions of the following annex.
LEONA AGLUKKAQ
Minister of the Environment
ANNEX
Conditions
(Paragraph 84(1)(a) of the Canadian Environmental Protection Act, 1999)
1. The following definitions apply in these ministerial conditions:
- “notifier” means the person who has, on February 5, 2014, provided to the Minister of the Environment the prescribed information concerning the substance, in accordance with subsection 81(1) of the Canadian Environmental Protection Act, 1999.
- “substance” means androsta-5, 16-dien-3-ol, 17-(3-pyridinyl)-, acetate (ester), (3β)-, Chemical Abstracts Service No. 154229-18-2.
- “waste” includes effluents resulting from rinsing vessels that contained the substance, effluents from cleaning of the equipment that has been in contact with the substance, process effluents that contain the substance and any residual amounts of the substance.
2. The notifier may manufacture or import the substance in accordance with the present ministerial conditions.
Restriction
3. The notifier may import or manufacture the substance to use it only as an ingredient in a treatment for cancer or to transfer its physical possession or control to a person who will use it only as an ingredient in a treatment for cancer.
4. At least 120 days prior to beginning the manufacture of the substance in Canada, the notifier shall inform the Minister of the Environment, in writing, and provide the following information:
- (a) the information specified in item 7 of Schedule 4 to the New Substances Notification Regulations (Chemicals and Polymers);
- (b) the civic address of the manufacturing facility within Canada;
- (c) the information specified in item 8, item 9 and paragraph 10(b) of Schedule 5 to those Regulations;
- (d) a brief description of the manufacturing process that details the reactants used, reaction stoichiometry, batch or continuous nature of the process, and scale of the process;
- (e) a flow diagram of the manufacturing process that includes features such as process tanks, holding tanks and distillation towers; and
- (f) a brief description of the major steps in manufacturing operations, the chemical conversions, the points of entry of all reactants and the points of release of the substance, and the processes to eliminate environmental release.
Restrictions for Returnable Vessels
5. Prior to returning returnable vessels that contained the substance to the supplier, the notifier or the person to whom the substance has been transferred shall follow the following procedures:
- (a) the vessels shall be hermetically sealed to prevent the release of the substance; or
- (b) all residual substance shall be removed from the vessels and collected.
Restrictions for Non-returnable Vessels
6. When disposing of, destroying or reusing non-returnable vessels that contained the substance, the notifier or the person to whom the substance has been transferred shall follow the following procedures:
- (a) the vessels shall be hermetically sealed prior to being destroyed or disposed of; or
- (b) all residual substance shall be removed from the vessels and collected before the vessels are disposed of, destroyed or reused.
Restrictions for Handling of the Substance
7. When handling the substance, the notifier or the person to whom the substance has been transferred shall follow the following procedures:
- (a) any handling of the uncontained substance shall be carried out in a contained facility where any release of the substance to the environment is prevented; and
- (b) any waste or spillage of the substance must be collected.
Disposal Restrictions
8. The substance and waste collected in application of paragraphs 5(b) and 6(b) and item 7 and the non-returnable vessels described in paragraph 6(a) shall be destroyed or disposed of by
- (a) incineration in accordance with the laws of the jurisdiction where the disposal facility is located; or
- (b) deposition in a secure landfill, in accordance with the laws of the jurisdiction where the landfill is located, if it cannot be destroyed or disposed of in accordance with paragraph (a).
Environmental Release
9. Where any release of the substance to the environment occurs, the person who has the physical possession or control of the substance shall immediately take all measures necessary to prevent any further release, and to limit the dispersion of any release. Furthermore, the person shall inform the Minister of the Environment immediately by contacting an enforcement officer, designated under the Canadian Environmental Protection Act, 1999, of the Environment Canada Regional Office that is closest to where the release occurred.
Record-keeping Requirements
10. (1) The notifier shall maintain electronic or paper records, with any documentation supporting the validity of the information contained in these records, indicating
- (a) the use of the substance;
- (b) the quantity of the substance that the notifier manufactures, imports, purchases, sells and uses;
- (c) the name and address of each person to whom the notifier transfers the physical possession or control of the substance; and
- (d) the name and address of the person in Canada who has disposed of the substance or waste for the notifier, the method used to do so, and the quantities of the substance or waste shipped to that person.
(2) The notifier shall maintain electronic or paper records mentioned in subitem (1) at the notifier's principal place of business in Canada for a period of at least five years after they are made.
Other Requirements
11. The notifier shall inform any person to whom they transfer the physical possession or control of the substance or of waste, in writing, of the terms of these ministerial conditions. The notifier shall obtain, prior to any transfer of the substance or waste, written confirmation from this person that they were informed of the terms of the present ministerial conditions. This written confirmation shall be maintained at the notifier's principal place of business in Canada for a period of at least five years from the day it was received.
Coming into Force
12. These ministerial conditions come into force on July 3, 2014.
[28-1-o]
DEPARTMENT OF THE ENVIRONMENT
CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION ACT, 1999
Notice with respect to the substances in the National Pollutant Release Inventory for 2014 and 2015
Notice is hereby given, pursuant to subsection 46(1) of the Canadian Environmental Protection Act, 1999 (the Act), that for the purpose of conducting research, creating an inventory of data, formulating objectives and codes of practice, issuing guidelines or assessing or reporting on the state of the environment, any person who owns or operates a facility described in Schedule 3 to this notice, and who possesses or who may reasonably be expected to have access to information described in Schedule 4, shall provide the Minister of the Environment with this information.
This notice applies to the calendar years 2014 and 2015. Information pertaining to the 2014 calendar year shall be provided no later than June 1, 2015. Information pertaining to the 2015 calendar year shall be provided no later than June 1, 2016.
If a person who owns or operates a facility, with respect to which information pertaining to at least one substance was submitted for the 2013 calendar year in response to the Notice with respect to the substances in the National Pollutant Release Inventory for 2012 and 2013, determines that the facility does not meet any of the criteria set out in this notice for the 2014 calendar year, the person shall notify the Minister of the Environment that the facility does not meet these criteria, and provide the reason that the facility does not meet these criteria, no later than June 1, 2015.
If a person who owns or operates a facility, with respect to which information pertaining to at least one substance is submitted for the 2014 calendar year in response to this notice, determines that the facility does not meet any of the criteria set out in this notice for the 2015 calendar year, the person shall notify the Minister of the Environment that the facility does not meet these criteria, and provide the reason that the facility does not meet these criteria, no later than June 1, 2016.
Pursuant to subsection 46(8) of the Act, persons who are subject to this notice shall keep copies of the information required under this notice, together with any calculations, measurements and other data on which the information is based, at the facility to which the calculations, measurements and other data relate, or at the principal place of business in Canada of the person who owns or operates the facility, for a period of three years from the date the information is required to be submitted.
Persons subject to the notice shall address responses or enquiries to the following address:
National Pollutant Release Inventory
Environment Canada
Fontaine Building
200 Sacré-Cœur Boulevard
Gatineau, Quebec
K1A 0H3
Telephone: 1-877-877-8375
Fax: 819-953-2347
Email: INRP-NPRI@ec.gc.ca
The Minister of the Environment intends to publish, in part, the information submitted in response to this notice. Pursuant to section 51 of the Act, any person who provides information in response to this notice may submit, with their information, a written request that it be treated as confidential based on the reasons set out in section 52 of the Act. The person requesting confidential treatment of the information shall indicate which of the reasons in section 52 of the Act applies to their request. Nevertheless, the Minister may disclose, in accordance with subsection 53(3) of the Act, information submitted in response to this notice.
DAVID MORIN
Director General
Science and Risk Assessment Directorate
On behalf of the Minister of the Environment
SCHEDULE 1
Substances
The substances captured under this notice are those set out in Parts 1 through 5 of this Schedule.
PART 1
Number | Name | CAS Registry Number (see reference 1†) |
---|---|---|
1. | Acetaldehyde | 75-07-0 |
2. | Acetonitrile | 75-05-8 |
3. | Acetophenone | 98-86-2 |
4. | Acrolein | 107-02-8 |
5. | Acrylamide | 79-06-1 |
6. | Acrylic acid (and its salts) (see reference 1) | 79-10-7 |
7. | Alkanes, C6-18, chloro | 68920-70-7 |
8. | Alkanes, C10-13, chloro | 85535-84-8 |
9. | Allyl alcohol | 107-18-6 |
10. | Aluminum (fume or dust only) | 7429-90-5 |
11. | Aluminum oxide (fibrous forms only) | 1344-28-1 |
12. | Ammonia (total) (see reference 2) | (see reference 1*) |
13. | Aniline (and its salts) (see reference 3) | 62-53-3 |
14. | Anthracene | 120-12-7 |
15. | Antimony (and its compounds) (see reference 4) | (see reference 2*) |
16. | Asbestos (friable form only) | 1332-21-4 |
17. | Benzene | 71-43-2 |
18. | Benzoyl chloride | 98-88-4 |
19. | Benzoyl peroxide | 94-36-0 |
20. | Benzyl chloride | 100-44-7 |
21. | Biphenyl | 92-52-4 |
22. | Bis(2-ethylhexyl) adipate | 103-23-1 |
23. | Bis(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate | 117-81-7 |
24. | Boron trifluoride | 7637-07-2 |
25. | Bromine | 7726-95-6 |
26. | Bromomethane | 74-83-9 |
27. | 1,3-Butadiene | 106-99-0 |
28. | 2-Butoxyethanol | 111-76-2 |
29. | Butyl acrylate | 141-32-2 |
30. | i-Butyl alcohol | 78-83-1 |
31. | n-Butyl alcohol | 71-36-3 |
32. | sec-Butyl alcohol | 78-92-2 |
33. | tert-Butyl alcohol | 75-65-0 |
34. | Butyl benzyl phthalate | 85-68-7 |
35. | 1,2-Butylene oxide | 106-88-7 |
36. | Butyraldehyde | 123-72-8 |
37. | C.I. Acid Green 3 | 4680-78-8 |
38. | C.I. Basic Green 4 | 569-64-2 |
39. | C.I. Basic Red 1 | 989-38-8 |
40. | C.I. Direct Blue 218 | 28407-37-6 |
41. | C.I. Disperse Yellow 3 | 2832-40-8 |
42. | C.I. Food Red 15 | 81-88-9 |
43. | C.I. Solvent Yellow 14 | 842-07-9 |
44. | Calcium cyanamide | 156-62-7 |
45. | Calcium fluoride | 7789-75-5 |
46. | Carbon disulphide | 75-15-0 |
47. | Carbon tetrachloride | 56-23-5 |
48. | Carbonyl sulphide | 463-58-1 |
49. | Catechol | 120-80-9 |
50. | CFC-11 | 75-69-4 |
51. | CFC-12 | 75-71-8 |
52. | CFC-13 | 75-72-9 |
53. | CFC-114 | 76-14-2 |
54. | CFC-115 | 76-15-3 |
55. | Chlorendic acid | 115-28-6 |
56. | Chlorine | 7782-50-5 |
57. | Chlorine dioxide | 10049-04-4 |
58. | Chloroacetic acid (and its salts) (see reference 5) | 79-11-8 |
59. | Chlorobenzene | 108-90-7 |
60. | Chloroethane | 75-00-3 |
61. | Chloroform | 67-66-3 |
62. | Chloromethane | 74-87-3 |
63. | 3-Chloropropionitrile | 542-76-7 |
64. | Chromium (and its compounds) (see reference 6) | (see reference 3*) |
65. | Cobalt (and its compounds) (see reference 7) | (see reference 4*) |
66. | Copper (and its compounds) (see reference 8) | (see reference 5*) |
67. | Cresol (all isomers, and their salts) (see reference 9), (see reference 10) | 1319-77-3 |
68. | Crotonaldehyde | 4170-30-3 |
69. | Cumene | 98-82-8 |
70. | Cumene hydroperoxide | 80-15-9 |
71. | Cyanides (ionic) | (see reference 6*) |
72. | Cyclohexane | 110-82-7 |
73. | Cyclohexanol | 108-93-0 |
74. | Decabromodiphenyl oxide | 1163-19-5 |
75. | 2,4-Diaminotoluene (and its salts) (see reference 11) | 95-80-7 |
76. | 2,6-Di-t-butyl-4-methylphenol | 128-37-0 |
77. | Dibutyl phthalate | 84-74-2 |
78. | o-Dichlorobenzene | 95-50-1 |
79. | p-Dichlorobenzene | 106-46-7 |
80. | 3,3′-Dichlorobenzidine dihydrochloride | 612-83-9 |
81. | 1,2-Dichloroethane | 107-06-2 |
82. | Dichloromethane | 75-09-2 |
83. | 2,4-Dichlorophenol (and its salts) (see reference 12) | 120-83-2 |
84. | 1,2-Dichloropropane | 78-87-5 |
85. | Dicyclopentadiene | 77-73-6 |
86. | Diethanolamine (and its salts) (see reference 13) | 111-42-2 |
87. | Diethyl phthalate | 84-66-2 |
88. | Diethyl sulphate | 64-67-5 |
89. | Dimethylamine | 124-40-3 |
90. | N,N-Dimethylaniline (and its salts) (see reference 14) | 121-69-7 |
91. | N,N-Dimethylformamide | 68-12-2 |
92. | Dimethyl phenol | 1300-71-6 |
93. | Dimethyl phthalate | 131-11-3 |
94. | Dimethyl sulphate | 77-78-1 |
95. | 4,6-Dinitro-o-cresol (and its salts) (see reference 15) | 534-52-1 |
96. | 2,4-Dinitrotoluene | 121-14-2 |
97. | 2,6-Dinitrotoluene | 606-20-2 |
98. | Dinitrotoluene (mixed isomers) (see reference 16) | 25321-14-6 |
99. | Di-n-octyl phthalate | 117-84-0 |
100. | 1,4-Dioxane | 123-91-1 |
101. | Diphenylamine | 122-39-4 |
102. | Epichlorohydrin | 106-89-8 |
103. | 2-Ethoxyethanol | 110-80-5 |
104. | 2-Ethoxyethyl acetate | 111-15-9 |
105. | Ethyl acrylate | 140-88-5 |
106. | Ethylbenzene | 100-41-4 |
107. | Ethylene | 74-85-1 |
108. | Ethylene glycol | 107-21-1 |
109. | Ethylene oxide | 75-21-8 |
110. | Ethylene thiourea | 96-45-7 |
111. | Fluorine | 7782-41-4 |
112. | Formaldehyde | 50-00-0 |
113. | Formic acid | 64-18-6 |
114. | Halon 1211 | 353-59-3 |
115. | Halon 1301 | 75-63-8 |
116. | HCFC-22 | 75-45-6 |
117. | HCFC-122 (all isomers) (see reference 17) | 41834-16-6 |
118. | HCFC-123 (all isomers) (see reference 18) | 34077-87-7 |
119. | HCFC-124 (all isomers) (see reference 19) | 63938-10-3 |
120. | HCFC-141b | 1717-00-6 |
121. | HCFC-142b | 75-68-3 |
122. | Hexachlorocyclopentadiene | 77-47-4 |
123. | Hexachloroethane | 67-72-1 |
124. | Hexachlorophene | 70-30-4 |
125. | n-Hexane | 110-54-3 |
126. | Hydrochloric acid | 7647-01-0 |
127. | Hydrogen cyanide | 74-90-8 |
128. | Hydrogen fluoride | 7664-39-3 |
129. | Hydrogen sulphide | 7783-06-4 |
130. | Hydroquinone (and its salts) (see reference 20) | 123-31-9 |
131. | Iron pentacarbonyl | 13463-40-6 |
132. | Isobutyraldehyde | 78-84-2 |
133. | Isophorone diisocyanate | 4098-71-9 |
134. | Isopropyl alcohol | 67-63-0 |
135. | Isosafrole | 120-58-1 |
136. | Lithium carbonate | 554-13-2 |
137. | Maleic anhydride | 108-31-6 |
138. | Manganese (and its compounds) (see reference 21) | (see reference 7*) |
139. | 2-Mercaptobenzothiazole | 149-30-4 |
140. | Methanol | 67-56-1 |
141. | 2-Methoxyethanol | 109-86-4 |
142. | 2-(2-Methoxyethoxy)ethanol | 111-77-3 |
143. | 2-Methoxyethyl acetate | 110-49-6 |
144. | Methyl acrylate | 96-33-3 |
145. | Methyl tert-butyl ether | 1634-04-4 |
146. | p,p′-Methylenebis(2-chloroaniline) | 101-14-4 |
147. | 1,1-Methylenebis(4-isocyanatocyclohexane) | 5124-30-1 |
148. | Methylenebis(phenylisocyanate) | 101-68-8 |
149. | p,p′-Methylenedianiline | 101-77-9 |
150. | Methyl ethyl ketone | 78-93-3 |
151. | Methyl iodide | 74-88-4 |
152. | Methyl isobutyl ketone | 108-10-1 |
153. | Methyl methacrylate | 80-62-6 |
154. | N-Methylolacrylamide | 924-42-5 |
155. | 2-Methylpyridine | 109-06-8 |
156. | N-Methyl-2-pyrrolidone | 872-50-4 |
157. | Michler's ketone (and its salts) (see reference 22) | 90-94-8 |
158. | Molybdenum trioxide | 1313-27-5 |
159. | Naphthalene | 91-20-3 |
160. | Nickel (and its compounds) (see reference 23) | (see reference 8*) |
161. | Nitrate ion (see reference 24) | (see reference 9*) |
162. | Nitric acid | 7697-37-2 |
163. | Nitrilotriacetic acid (and its salts) (see reference 25) | 139-13-9 |
164. | p-Nitroaniline | 100-01-6 |
165. | Nitrobenzene | 98-95-3 |
166. | Nitroglycerin | 55-63-0 |
167. | p-Nitrophenol (and its salts) (see reference 26) | 100-02-7 |
168. | 2-Nitropropane | 79-46-9 |
169. | N-Nitrosodiphenylamine | 86-30-6 |
170. | Octylphenol and its ethoxylates (see reference 27) | (see reference 10*) |
171. | Paraldehyde | 123-63-7 |
172. | Pentachloroethane | 76-01-7 |
173. | Peracetic acid (and its salts) (see reference 28) | 79-21-0 |
174. | Phenol (and its salts) (see reference 29) | 108-95-2 |
175. | p-Phenylenediamine (and its salts) (see reference 30) | 106-50-3 |
176. | o-Phenylphenol (and its salts) (see reference 31) | 90-43-7 |
177. | Phosgene | 75-44-5 |
178. | Phosphorus (yellow or white only) | 7723-14-0 |
179. | Phosphorus (total) (see reference 32) | (see reference 11*) |
180. | Phthalic anhydride | 85-44-9 |
181. | Polymeric diphenylmethane diisocyanate | 9016-87-9 |
182. | Potassium bromate | 7758-01-2 |
183. | Propargyl alcohol | 107-19-7 |
184. | Propionaldehyde | 123-38-6 |
185. | Propylene | 115-07-1 |
186. | Propylene oxide | 75-56-9 |
187. | Pyridine (and its salts) (see reference 33) | 110-86-1 |
188. | p-Quinone | 106-51-4 |
189. | Safrole | 94-59-7 |
190. | Silver (and its compounds) (see reference 34) | (see reference 12*) |
191. | Sodium fluoride | 7681-49-4 |
192. | Sodium nitrite | 7632-00-0 |
193. | Styrene | 100-42-5 |
194. | Styrene oxide | 96-09-3 |
195. | Sulphuric acid | 7664-93-9 |
196. | 1,1,1,2-Tetrachloroethane | 630-20-6 |
197. | 1,1,2,2-Tetrachloroethane | 79-34-5 |
198. | Tetrachloroethylene | 127-18-4 |
199. | Tetracycline hydrochloride | 64-75-5 |
200. | Thiourea | 62-56-6 |
201. | Thorium dioxide | 1314-20-1 |
202. | Titanium tetrachloride | 7550-45-0 |
203. | Toluene | 108-88-3 |
204. | Total reduced sulphur (expressed as hydrogen sulphide) (see reference 35) | (see reference 13*) |
205. | 1,2,4-Trichlorobenzene | 120-82-1 |
206. | 1,1,2-Trichloroethane | 79-00-5 |
207. | Trichloroethylene | 79-01-6 |
208. | Triethylamine | 121-44-8 |
209. | 1,2,4-Trimethylbenzene | 95-63-6 |
210. | 2,2,4-Trimethylhexamethylene diisocyanate | 16938-22-0 |
211. | 2,4,4-Trimethylhexamethylene diisocyanate | 15646-96-5 |
212. | Vanadium (and its compounds) (see reference 36) | 7440-62-2 |
213. | Vinyl acetate | 108-05-4 |
214. | Vinyl chloride | 75-01-4 |
215. | Vinylidene chloride | 75-35-4 |
216. | Xylene (all isomers) (see reference 37) | 1330-20-7 |
217. | Zinc (and its compounds) (see reference 38) | (see reference 14*) |
Number | Name | CAS Registry Number (see reference 2†) |
---|---|---|
218. | Acrylonitrile | 107-13-1 |
219. | Arsenic (and its compounds) (see reference 39) | (see reference 15*) |
220. | Bisphenol A | 80-05-7 |
221. | Cadmium (and its compounds) (see reference 40) | (see reference 16*) |
222. | Hexavalent chromium (and its compounds) (see reference 41) | (see reference 17*) |
223. | Hydrazine (and its salts) (see reference 42) | 302-01-2 |
224. | Isoprene | 78-79-5 |
225. | Lead (and its compounds) (see reference 43) | (see reference 18*) |
226. | Mercury (and its compounds) (see reference 44) | (see reference 19*) |
227. | Nonylphenol and its ethoxylates (see reference 45) | (see reference 20*) |
228. | Selenium (and its compounds) (see reference 46) | (see reference 21*) |
229. | Tetraethyl lead | 78-00-2 |
230. | Thallium (and its compounds) (see reference 47) | (see reference 22*) |
231. | Toluene-2,4-diisocyanate | 584-84-9 |
232. | Toluene-2,6-diisocyanate | 91-08-7 |
233. | Toluenediisocyanate (mixed isomers) (see reference 48) | 26471-62-5 |
Number | Name | CAS Registry Number (see reference 3†) |
---|---|---|
234. | Acenaphthene | 83-32-9 |
235. | Acenaphthylene | 208-96-8 |
236. | Benzo(a)anthracene | 56-55-3 |
237. | Benzo(a)phenanthrene | 218-01-9 |
238. | Benzo(a)pyrene | 50-32-8 |
239. | Benzo(b)fluoranthene | 205-99-2 |
240. | Benzo(e)pyrene | 192-97-2 |
241. | Benzo(g,h,i)perylene | 191-24-2 |
242. | Benzo(j)fluoranthene | 205-82-3 |
243. | Benzo(k)fluoranthene | 207-08-9 |
244. | Dibenzo(a,e)fluoranthene | 5385-75-1 |
245. | Dibenzo(a,e)pyrene | 192-65-4 |
246. | Dibenzo(a,h)acridine | 226-36-8 |
247. | Dibenzo(a,h)anthracene | 53-70-3 |
248. | Dibenzo(a,h)pyrene | 189-64-0 |
249. | Dibenzo(a,i)pyrene | 189-55-9 |
250. | Dibenzo(a,j)acridine | 224-42-0 |
251. | Dibenzo(a,l)pyrene | 191-30-0 |
252. | 7H-Dibenzo(c,g)carbazole | 194-59-2 |
253. | 7,12-Dimethylbenz(a)anthracene | 57-97-6 |
254. | Fluoranthene | 206-44-0 |
255. | Fluorene | 86-73-7 |
256. | Indeno(1,2,3-c,d)pyrene | 193-39-5 |
257. | 3-Methylcholanthrene | 56-49-5 |
258. | 5-Methylchrysene | 3697-24-3 |
259. | 1-Nitropyrene | 5522-43-0 |
260. | Perylene | 198-55-0 |
261. | Phenanthrene | 85-01-8 |
262. | Pyrene | 129-00-0 |
263. | Quinoline | 91-22-5 |
Number | Name | CAS Registry Number (see reference 4†) |
---|---|---|
264. | 2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin | 1746-01-6 |
265. | 1,2,3,7,8-Pentachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin | 40321-76-4 |
266. | 1,2,3,4,7,8-Hexachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin | 39227-28-6 |
267. | 1,2,3,7,8,9-Hexachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin | 19408-74-3 |
268. | 1,2,3,6,7,8-Hexachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin | 57653-85-7 |
269. | 1,2,3,4,6,7,8-Heptachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin | 35822-46-9 |
270. | Octachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin | 3268-87-9 |
271. | 2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzofuran | 51207-31-9 |
272. | 2,3,4,7,8-Pentachlorodibenzofuran | 57117-31-4 |
273. | 1,2,3,7,8-Pentachlorodibenzofuran | 57117-41-6 |
274. | 1,2,3,4,7,8-Hexachlorodibenzofuran | 70648-26-9 |
275. | 1,2,3,7,8,9-Hexachlorodibenzofuran | 72918-21-9 |
276. | 1,2,3,6,7,8-Hexachlorodibenzofuran | 57117-44-9 |
277. | 2,3,4,6,7,8-Hexachlorodibenzofuran | 60851-34-5 |
278. | 1,2,3,4,6,7,8-Heptachlorodibenzofuran | 67562-39-4 |
279. | 1,2,3,4,7,8,9-Heptachlorodibenzofuran | 55673-89-7 |
280. | Octachlorodibenzofuran | 39001-02-0 |
281. | Hexachlorobenzene | 118-74-1 |
Number | Name | CAS Registry Number (see reference 5†) |
---|---|---|
282. | Carbon monoxide | 630-08-0 |
283. | Nitrogen oxides (expressed as nitrogen dioxide) | 11104-93-1 |
284. | PM2.5 (see reference 49), (see reference 50) | (see reference 23*) |
285. | PM10 (see reference 51), (see reference 52) | (see reference 24*) |
286. | Sulphur dioxide | 7446-09-5 |
287. | Total particulate matter (see reference 53), (see reference 54) | (see reference 25*) |
288. | Volatile organic compounds (see reference 55) | (see reference 26*) |
PART 5 — VOLATILE ORGANIC COMPOUNDS WITH ADDITIONAL REPORTING REQUIREMENTS
Number | Name | CAS Registry Number (see reference 6†) |
---|---|---|
289. | Acetylene | 74-86-2 |
290. | Adipic acid | 124-04-9 |
291. | Aniline (and its salts) (see reference 56) | 62-53-3 |
292. | Benzene | 71-43-2 |
293. | 1,3-Butadiene | 106-99-0 |
294. | 2-Butoxyethanol | 111-76-2 |
295. | n-Butyl acetate | 123-86-4 |
296. | Chlorobenzene | 108-90-7 |
297. | p-Dichlorobenzene | 106-46-7 |
298. | 1,2-Dichloroethane | 107-06-2 |
299. | Dimethylether | 115-10-6 |
300. | Ethanol | 64-17-5 |
301. | Ethyl acetate | 141-78-6 |
302. | Ethylene | 74-85-1 |
303. | Formaldehyde | 50-00-0 |
304. | Furfuryl alcohol | 98-00-0 |
305. | n-Hexane | 110-54-3 |
306. | Isopropyl alcohol | 67-63-0 |
307. | D-Limonene | 5989-27-5 |
308. | Methanol | 67-56-1 |
309. | Methyl ethyl ketone | 78-93-3 |
310. | 2-Methyl-3-hexanone | 7379-12-6 |
311. | Methyl isobutyl ketone | 108-10-1 |
312. | Myrcene | 123-35-3 |
313. | beta-Phellandrene | 555-10-2 |
314. | Phenyl isocyanate | 103-71-9 |
315. | alpha-Pinene | 80-56-8 |
316. | beta-Pinene | 127-91-3 |
317. | Propane | 74-98-6 |
318. | Propylene | 115-07-1 |
319. | Styrene | 100-42-5 |
320. | Tetrahydrofuran | 109-99-9 |
321. | Toluene | 108-88-3 |
322. | 1,2,4-Trimethylbenzene | 95-63-6 |
323. | Trimethylfluorosilane | 420-56-4 |
324. | Vinyl acetate | 108-05-4 |
Number | Name | CAS Registry Number (see reference 7†) |
---|---|---|
325. | Anthraquinone (all isomers) | (see reference 27*) |
326. | Butane (all isomers) | (see reference 28*) |
327. | Butene (all isomers) | 25167-67-3 |
328. | Cycloheptane (all isomers) | (see reference 29*) |
329. | Cyclohexene (all isomers) | (see reference 30*) |
330. | Cyclooctane (all isomers) | (see reference 31*) |
331. | Decane (all isomers) | (see reference 32*) |
332. | Dihydronaphthalene (all isomers) | (see reference 33*) |
333. | Dodecane (all isomers) | (see reference 34*) |
334. | Heptane (all isomers) | (see reference 35*) |
335. | Hexane (see reference 57) | (see reference 36*) |
336. | Hexene (all isomers) | 25264-93-1 |
337. | Methylindan (all isomers) | 27133-93-3 |
338. | Nonane (all isomers) | (see reference 37*) |
339. | Octane (all isomers) | (see reference 38*) |
340. | Pentane (all isomers) | (see reference 39*) |
341. | Pentene (all isomers) | (see reference 40*) |
342. | Terpenes (all isomers) | 68956-56-9 |
343. | Trimethylbenzene (see reference 58) | 25551-13-7 |
344. | Xylene (all isomers) (see reference 59) | 1330-20-7 |
Number | Name | CAS Registry Number (see reference 8†) |
---|---|---|
345. | Creosote | 8001-58-9 |
346. | Diethylene glycol butyl ether | 112-34-5 |
347. | Diethylene glycol ethyl ether acetate | 112-15-2 |
348. | Ethylene glycol butyl ether acetate | 112-07-2 |
349. | Ethylene glycol hexyl ether | 112-25-4 |
350. | Heavy alkylate naphtha | 64741-65-7 |
351. | Heavy aromatic solvent naphtha | 64742-94-5 |
352. | Hydrotreated heavy naphtha | 64742-48-9 |
353. | Hydrotreated light distillate | 64742-47-8 |
354. | Light aromatic solvent naphtha | 64742-95-6 |
355. | Mineral spirits | 64475-85-0 |
356. | Naphtha | 8030-30-6 |
357. | Propylene glycol butyl ether | 5131-66-8 |
358. | Propylene glycol methyl ether acetate | 108-65-6 |
359. | Solvent naphtha light aliphatic | 64742-89-8 |
360. | Solvent naphtha medium aliphatic | 64742-88-7 |
361. | Stoddard solvent | 8052-41-3 |
362. | VM & P naphtha | 8032-32-4 |
363. | White mineral oil | 8042-47-5 |
SCHEDULE 2
Definitions
1. The following definitions apply to this notice and its schedules:
- “alloy” means metal products containing two or more elements as a solid solution, intermetallic compounds, and mixtures of metallic phases. « alliage »
- “article” means a manufactured item that does not release a substance when it undergoes processing or other use. « article »
- “base metal” means copper, lead, nickel or zinc. It does not include aluminum or any other metals. « métal commun »
- “by-product” means a substance which is incidentally manufactured, processed or otherwise used at the facility at any concentration, and released to the environment or disposed of. « sous-produit »
- “CAS Registry Number” or “CAS RN” refer to the Chemical Abstracts Service Registry Number. « numéro d'enregistrement CAS » or « numéro du CAS »
- “contiguous facility” means all buildings, equipment, structures and stationary items that are located on a single site, or on contiguous sites or adjacent sites that are owned or operated by the same person and that function as a single integrated site, including wastewater collection systems that release treated or untreated wastewater into surface waters. « installation contiguë »
- “emission factors” means numerical values that relate the quantity of substances emitted from a source to a common activity associated with those emissions, and that can be categorized as published emission factors or site-specific emission factors. « facteurs d'émission »
- “employee” means an individual employed at the facility and includes the owner of the facility who performs work on-site at the facility, and a person, such as a contractor, who, at the facility, performs work that is related to the operations of the facility, for the period of time that the person is performing that work. « employé »
- “external combustion equipment” means any equipment with a combustion process that occurs at atmospheric pressure and with excess air. « appareil à combustion externe »
- “facility” means a contiguous facility, a portable facility, a pipeline installation, or an offshore installation. « installation »
- “fossil fuel” means fuel that is in a solid or liquid state at standard temperature and pressure, such as coal, petroleum or any solid or liquid fuel derived from such. « combustible fossile »
- “full-time employee equivalent” means the unit obtained by dividing by 2 000 hours the sum of
- (a) the total hours worked by individuals employed at the facility and the total hours of paid vacation and of sick leave taken by individuals employed at the facility;
- (b) the hours worked on-site at the facility by the owner of the facility, if not employed by the facility; and
- (c) the hours worked on-site at the facility by a person, such as a contractor, who, at the facility, performs work related to the operations of the facility. « équivalent d'employé à temps plein »
- “level of quantification” means, in respect of a substance, the lowest concentration that can be accurately measured using sensitive but routine sampling and analytical methods. « limite de dosage »
- “manufacture” means to produce, prepare, or compound a substance, and includes the incidental production of a substance as a by-product. « fabrication »
- “offshore installation” means an offshore drilling unit, production platform or ship, or subsea installation that is related to the exploitation of oil or natural gas and that is attached or anchored to the continental shelf of Canada or within Canada's exclusive economic zone. « installation extracôtière »
- “other use” or “otherwise used” means any use, disposal or release of a substance which is not included in the definitions of “manufacture” or “process,” and includes the other use of by-products. « autre utilisation » or « utilisation d'une autre manière »
- “parent company” means the highest level company or group of companies that owns or directly controls the reporting facility. « société mère »
- “pipeline installation” means a collection of equipment situated at a single site, used in the operation of a natural gas transmission or distribution pipeline. « installation de pipeline »
- “pit” means an excavation that is open to the air, and any associated infrastructure that is operated for the purpose of extracting sand, clay, marl, earth, shale, gravel, unconsolidated rock, or other unconsolidated materials, but not bitumen. « sablière »
- “pollution prevention” means the use of processes, practices, materials, products, substances or energy that avoid or minimize the creation of pollutants and waste, and reduce the overall risk to the environment or human health. « prévention de la pollution »
- “portable facility” means portable polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) destruction equipment, portable asphalt plants, and portable concrete batching plants. « installation mobile »
- “process” means the preparation of a substance, after its manufacture, for commercial distribution and includes preparation of the substance in the same physical state or chemical form as that received by the facility, or preparation which produces a change in physical state or chemical form, and also includes the processing of the substance as a by-product. « préparation »
- “quarry” means an excavation that is open to the air and any associated infrastructure that is operated for the purpose of working, recovering or extracting limestone, sandstone, dolostone, marble, granite, or other consolidated rock. « carrière »
- “recycling” means any activity that prevents a material or a component of the material from becoming a material destined for disposal. « recyclage »
- “secondary aluminum” means aluminum-bearing scrap or aluminum-bearing materials. « aluminium de récupération »
- “secondary lead” means lead-bearing scrap or lead-bearing materials, other than lead-bearing concentrates derived from a mining operation. « plomb de récupération »
- “terminal operations” means
- (a) the use of storage tanks and associated equipment at a site used to store or transfer crude oil, artificial crude or intermediates of fuel products into or out of a pipeline; or
- (b) operating activities of a primary distribution installation normally equipped with floating roof tanks that receives gasoline by pipeline, railcar, marine vessel or directly from a refinery. « opérations de terminal »
- “treatment” means subjecting the substance to physical, chemical, biological or thermal processes. « traitement »
- “wood preservation” means the use of a preservative for the preservation of wood by means of heat or pressure treatment, or both, and includes the manufacture, blending, or reformulation of wood preservatives for that purpose. « préservation du bois »
SCHEDULE 3
Criteria for Reporting
GENERAL
1. (1) This notice applies to any person who owns or operates a facility that meets one or more of the criteria listed in Parts 1 to 5 of this Schedule and that satisfies any of the following, during a given calendar year:
- (a) is one at which any of the following activities take place, regardless of the number of hours worked by employees:
- (i) non-hazardous solid waste incineration of 26 tonnes or more of waste, including, but not limited to, incineration with conical burners and beehive burners,
- (ii) biomedical or hospital waste incineration of 26 tonnes or more of waste,
- (iii) hazardous waste incineration,
- (iv) sewage sludge incineration,
- (v) wood preservation,
- (vi) terminal operations,
- (vii) discharge of treated or untreated wastewater from a wastewater collection system with an average discharge of 10 000 m3 or more per day into surface waters, or
- (viii) operations at pits or quarries where production is 500 000 tonnes or more;
- (b) is one at which the employees work a total of 20 000 hours or more;
- (c) is one at which the employees work a total of less than 20 000 hours and that meets the criteria of Part 4 of this Schedule; or
- (d) is a pipeline installation.
(2) Despite subsection (1), this notice does not apply to a facility if the only activities that take place at that facility are
- (a) the exploration for oil or gas, or the drilling of oil or gas wells; or
- (b) operations at pits or quarries where production is less than 500 000 tonnes.
2. (1) In calculating the mass reporting thresholds set out in this Schedule, a person subject to this notice shall exclude the quantity of a substance that is manufactured, processed or otherwise used in the following activities:
- (a) education or training of students;
- (b) research or testing;
- (c) maintenance and repair of vehicles, where vehicles include automobiles, trucks, locomotives, ships or aircraft;
- (d) distribution, storage, or retail sale of fuels, except as part of terminal operations;
- (e) wholesale or retail sale of articles or products that contain the substance;
- (f) retail sale of the substance;
- (g) growing, harvesting, or management of a renewable natural resource; or
- (h) practice of dentistry.
(2) For the purpose of paragraph (1)(c), the painting and stripping of vehicles or their components, and the rebuilding or remanufacturing of vehicle components, are not to be excluded from the calculation of mass reporting thresholds in this Schedule.
(3) Despite subsection (1), the quantity of a substance listed in Part 4 or 5 of Schedule 1 that is released to air as the result of combustion of fuel in stationary combustion equipment shall be included in calculating the mass reporting thresholds set out in Part 4 or 5 of this Schedule.
(4) If one or more of the activities listed in subsection (1) are the only activities that take place at the facility, Parts 1 to 3 of Schedules 3 and 4 do not apply.
3. (1) In calculating the mass reporting thresholds set out in this Schedule, a person subject to this notice shall exclude the quantity of a substance that is
- (a) manufactured, processed or otherwise used for the exploration for oil or gas, or the drilling of oil or gas wells; or
- (b) contained in
- (i) articles,
- (ii) materials used as structural components of the facility, but not the process equipment,
- (iii) materials used in janitorial or facility grounds maintenance,
- (iv) materials used for personal use by employees or other persons,
- (v) intake water or intake air, including, but not limited to, water used for process cooling or air used either as compressed air or for combustion,
- (vi) unconsolidated overburden,
- (vii) waste rock that is inert or clean according to the terms or conditions of a valid federal or provincial operating permit issued for the facility, or
- (viii) components of tailings that are inert and inorganic and that are not reduced in size or otherwise physically or chemically altered during extraction, recovery or beneficiation.
(2) If there is no applicable permit as referenced in subpara-graph (1)(b)(vii), a person subject to this notice shall exclude the quantity of a substance that is contained in waste rock if
- (a) the concentration of sulphur in the waste rock is more than 0.2%, and the ratio of neutralizing potential to acid-generating potential is 3:1 or more; or
- (b) the concentration of sulphur in the waste rock is 0.2% or less.
(3) Despite subparagraph (1)(b)(vii) and subsection (2), a person subject to this notice shall not exclude the quantity of arsenic contained in waste rock if the concentration of arsenic in the waste rock is more than 12 mg of arsenic per kilogram of waste rock.
(4) Despite subsections (1), (2) and (3), a quantity of a substance released to air or surface waters from materials listed under subparagraphs (1)(b)(vi) through (viii) shall be included in the calculation of the mass reporting thresholds.
4. (1) For the purpose of this notice, a disposal of a substance is to be construed as its
- (a) final disposal to landfill, land application or underground injection, either on-site or off-site;
- (b) transfer off-site for storage or treatment prior to final disposal; or
- (c) movement into an area where tailings or waste rock are discarded or stored, and further managed to reduce or prevent releases to air, water or land, either on-site or off-site.
(2) The quantity of a substance disposed of shall be included in the calculation of the mass reporting thresholds for Parts 1 and 2 of this Schedule.
(3) The disposal of a substance is not to be included as a release.
5. The person who owns or operates the facility as of December 31 of a given calendar year shall report for that entire calendar year. If operations at a facility are terminated, the last owner or operator of that facility is required to report for the portion of the calendar year during which the facility was in operation.
PART 1
CRITERIA FOR REPORTING SUBSTANCES LISTED IN PART 1 OF SCHEDULE 1
6. (1) A person subject to this notice shall report information with respect to a given calendar year, pertaining to a contiguous facility or an offshore installation in relation to a substance listed in Part 1 of Schedule 1, whether or not there is a release, disposal or transfer off-site for recycling of the substance, if, during that calendar year,
- (a) employees at that facility work a total of 20 000 hours or more or an activity listed in paragraph 1(1)(a) of this Schedule takes place at that facility; and
- (b) the substance is manufactured, processed or otherwise used
- (i) in a quantity equal to or greater than the applicable mass reporting threshold set out in column 2 of Table 1, and
- (ii) at a concentration equal to or greater than the applicable concentration by weight set out in column 3 of Table 1, or regardless of concentration if there is no corresponding value in that column for the substance.
(2) For the purpose of paragraph (1)(b), the quantity of a substance that is a by-product or is contained in tailings shall be included in the calculation of the mass reporting threshold set out in column 2 of Table 1, regardless of concentration.
(3) For the purpose of paragraph (1)(b), the quantity of a substance, including a by-product, contained in waste rock shall be included in the calculation of the mass reporting threshold set out in column 2 of Table 1 if it is at a concentration equal to or greater than 1% concentration by weight for Part 1, Group A substances, or regardless of concentration for Part 1, Group B substances.
Item | Column 1 Substances in Part 1 of Schedule 1 |
Column 2 Mass Reporting Threshold |
Column 3 Concentration by Weight |
---|---|---|---|
Schedule 1, Part 1, Group A substances | |||
1. | Group A substances | 10 tonnes | 1% |
Schedule 1, Part 1, Group B substances | |||
2. | Acrylonitrile | 1 000 kilograms | 0.1% |
3. | Arsenic (and its compounds) | 50 kilograms | 0.1% |
4. | Bisphenol A | 100 kilograms | 1% |
5. | Cadmium (and its compounds) | 5 kilograms | 0.1% |
6. | Hexavalent chromium (and its compounds) | 50 kilograms | 0.1% |
7. | Hydrazine (and its salts) | 1 000 kilograms | 1% |
8. | Isoprene | 100 kilograms | 1% |
9. | Lead (and its compounds) | 50 kilograms | 0.1% |
10. | Mercury (and its compounds) | 5 kilograms | N/A |
11. | Nonylphenol and its ethoxylates | 1 000 kilograms | 1% |
12. | Selenium (and its compounds) | 100 kilograms | 0.000005% |
13. | Tetraethyl lead | 50 kilograms | 0.1% |
14. | Thallium (and its compounds) | 100 kilograms | 1% |
15. | Toluene-2,4-diisocyanate | 100 kilograms | 0.1% |
16. | Toluene-2,6-diisocyanate | 100 kilograms | 0.1% |
17. | Toluenediisocyanate (mixed isomers) | 100 kilograms | 0.1% |
PART 2
CRITERIA FOR REPORTING SUBSTANCES LISTED IN PART 2 OF SCHEDULE 1
7. A person subject to this notice shall report information with respect to a given calendar year, pertaining to a contiguous facility, a portable facility or an offshore installation in relation to substances listed in Part 2 of Schedule 1 if, during that calendar year,
- (a) employees at that facility work a total of 20 000 hours or more or an activity listed in paragraph 1(1)(a) of this Schedule takes place at that facility; and
- (b) the total quantity of all substances listed in Part 2 of Schedule 1 released, disposed of, or transferred off-site for recycling, as a result of incidental manufacture or as a result of the generation of tailings, is 50 kg or more.
8. Despite section 7, a person subject to this notice shall report information with respect to a given calendar year, pertaining to a contiguous facility in relation to substances listed in Part 2 of Schedule 1 if, during that calendar year,
- (a) wood preservation using creosote takes place at the facility; and
- (b) the substance is released, disposed of, or transferred off-site for recycling as a result of wood preservation using creosote.
PART 3
CRITERIA FOR REPORTING SUBSTANCES LISTED IN PART 3 OF SCHEDULE 1
9. A person subject to this notice shall report information with respect to a given calendar year, pertaining to a contiguous facility, a portable facility or an offshore installation in relation to substances listed in Part 3 of Schedule 1 if, during that calendar year,
- (a) one or more of the following activities take place at that facility, regardless of the number of hours worked by employees:
- (i) non-hazardous solid waste incineration of 26 tonnes or more of waste, including, but not limited to, incineration with conical burners and beehive burners,
- (ii) biomedical or hospital waste incineration of 26 tonnes or more of waste,
- (iii) hazardous waste incineration,
- (iv) sewage sludge incineration, or
- (v) wood preservation using pentachlorophenol; or
- (b) employees at that facility work a total of 20 000 hours or more and one or more of the following activities take place at that facility:
- (i) base metals smelting,
- (ii) smelting of secondary aluminum,
- (iii) smelting of secondary lead,
- (iv) manufacturing of iron using a sintering process,
- (v) operation of electric arc furnaces in steel foundries,
- (vi) operation of electric arc furnaces in steel manufacturing,
- (vii) production of magnesium,
- (viii) manufacturing of Portland cement,
- (ix) production of chlorinated organic solvents or chlorinated monomers,
- (x) combustion of fossil fuel in a boiler unit with a nameplate capacity of 25 MW of electricity or greater, for the purpose of producing steam for the production of electricity,
- (xi) combustion of hog fuel originating from logs that were transported or stored in salt water in the pulp and paper sector,
- (xii) combustion of fuel in kraft liquor boilers used in the pulp and paper sector, or
- (xiii) titanium dioxide pigment production using the chloride process.
PART 4
CRITERIA FOR REPORTING SUBSTANCES LISTED IN PART 4 OF SCHEDULE 1
10. A person subject to this notice shall report information with respect to a given calendar year, in relation to a substance listed in Part 4 of Schedule 1 if, during that calendar year, the substance is released to air from a facility in a quantity equal to or greater than the mass reporting threshold set out in column 2 of Table 2 for that substance.
11. For the purpose of section 10, a person subject to this notice shall include releases to air from road dust of PM2.5, PM10 and total particulate matter for the calculation of the mass reporting thresholds set out in this Part if vehicles travelled more than 10 000 vehicle-kilometres on unpaved roads at the contiguous facility.
12. For the purpose of section 10 and despite section 11, the person shall include only the quantity of the substance released to air from the combustion of fuel in stationary combustion equipment at the facility when calculating the mass reporting threshold for that substance, if, during that given calendar year,
- (a) the facility is a contiguous facility, a portable facility or an offshore installation where employees work a total of less than 20 000 hours, but not one at which an activity listed in paragraph 1(1)(a) of this Schedule takes place;
- (b) the facility is a pipeline installation; or
- (c) one or more of the activities listed in section 2 of this Schedule are the only activities that take place at that facility.
13. Despite section 10, the person is not required to report information pertaining to a given calendar year, in relation to a substance listed in Part 4 of Schedule 1 if, during that calendar year, the substance is released to air exclusively from stationary external combustion equipment, where
- (a) the cumulative nameplate capacity of the equipment is less than 10 million British thermal units per hour; and
- (b) the only type of fuel combusted in the equipment is commercial grade natural gas, liquefied petroleum gas, Number 1 or 2 fuel oil or any combination thereof.
Item | Column 1 Substance in Part 4 of Schedule 1 |
Column 2 Mass Reporting Threshold |
---|---|---|
1. | Carbon monoxide | 20 tonnes |
2. | Nitrogen oxides | 20 tonnes |
3. | PM2.5 | 0.3 tonnes |
4. | PM10 | 0.5 tonnes |
5. | Sulphur dioxide | 20 tonnes |
6. | Total particulate matter | 20 tonnes |
7. | Volatile organic compounds | 10 tonnes |
PART 5
CRITERIA FOR REPORTING SUBSTANCES LISTED IN PART 5 OF SCHEDULE 1
14. A person subject to this notice shall report information with respect to a given calendar year, in relation to a substance listed in Part 5 of Schedule 1 if, during that calendar year, the criteria under section 10 or 11 for volatile organic compounds are satisfied and the substance is released to air in a quantity of 1 tonne or more.
SCHEDULE 4
Information Required by this Notice and Manner of Reporting
GENERAL
1. If a person subject to this notice is required by federal or provincial legislation or a municipal by-law to measure or monitor releases, disposals or transfers off site for recycling of any of the substances set out in Schedule 1 of this notice, the person shall use those data to report in response to this notice.
2. If the person is not subject to any of the requirements described in section 1 of this Schedule, the person shall report information by using one of the following methods: continuous emission monitoring, predictive emission monitoring, source testing, mass balance, published emission factors, site-specific emission factors, or engineering estimates.
3. If a person subject to this notice is not required to include a quantity of a substance when calculating the mass reporting threshold pursuant to section 2 or 3 or subsection 6(3) of Schedule 3, the person is not required to report information in respect of those quantities of the substance when reporting under this Schedule.
4. A person subject to this notice shall provide a Statement of Certification or electronic certification certifying that the information is true, accurate and complete or shall authorize another person to act on their behalf and so certify using the Statement of Certification or electronic certification.
5. A person subject to this notice shall provide the information required in this Schedule, for each calendar year for which the criteria in Schedule 3 have been satisfied, using the online reporting system or by mail sent to the address provided in this notice. The required information shall be reported separately by facility.
FACILITY INFORMATION
6. A person subject to this notice shall report the following information in respect of a facility:
- (a) the facility name and the address of its physical location;
- (b) the legal and trade name of the person who owns or operates the facility, their mailing address, their Dun and Bradstreet number (if applicable), and their federal Business Number as assigned by the Canada Revenue Agency;
- (c) the legal name or names of the Canadian parent companies (if any), their civic addresses, percentage of ownership, Dun and Bradstreet number (if applicable), and federal Business Number as assigned by the Canada Revenue Agency;
- (d) the name, position, mailing address, email address and telephone number of the person who
- (i) is the technical contact,
- (ii) is the contact for the public (if any),
- (iii) is co-ordinating the submission of the report (if any), and
- (iv) owns or operates the facility subject to this notice, or the company official authorized to act on their behalf pursuant to section 4 of this Schedule;
- (e) if an independent contractor completed the report, the name, company name, mailing addresses, email address, and telephone number of the independent contractor;
- (f) the National Pollutant Release Inventory (NPRI) identification number;
- (g) the six-digit North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) Canada code;
- (h) the provincial licence number or numbers or the provincial identification number or numbers for a facility classified under NAICS Canada code 211113 (Conventional Oil and Gas Extraction);
- (i) the number of full-time employee equivalents;
- (j) the latitude and longitude coordinates of the facility if the facility is portable or the person is reporting in respect of the facility for the first time;
- (k) identification of the activities listed in paragraph 1(1)(a) of Schedule 3 that take place at the facility;
- (l) identification of the activities listed in section 9 of Schedule 3 that take place at the facility;
- (m) identification of whether or not wood preservation using creosote takes place at the facility;
- (n) identification of whether or not the person is required to report one or more substances listed in Part 4 of Schedule 1 and, if reporting is required, the usual daily and weekly operating schedule of the facility, and any periods of time longer than one week when operations at the facility are shut down;
- (o) identification of whether, during the calendar year, the person subject to the notice prepared or implemented a pollution prevention plan, and if so, whether the pollution prevention plan
- (i) was required by a notice published under Part 4 of the Canadian Environmental Protection Act, 1999, and, if so, the reference code for the notice published in the Canada Gazette, Part I,
- (ii) was prepared or implemented for another government or under another Act of Parliament,
- (iii) was prepared or implemented on a voluntary basis,
- (iv) was updated, and
- (v) addressed substances, energy conservation or water conservation; and
- (p) any pollution prevention activities undertaken by the facility during the calendar year, listed separately by
- (i) materials or feedstock substitution,
- (ii) product design or reformulation,
- (iii) equipment or process modifications,
- (iv) spill and leak prevention,
- (v) on-site reuse, recycling or recovery,
- (vi) improved inventory management or purchasing techniques,
- (vii) improved operating practices or training,
- (viii) modifications, procedures or practices other than any set out in the preceding subparagraphs (specify), or
- (ix) no pollution prevention activities.
PART 1
INFORMATION TO PROVIDE RESPECTING SUBSTANCES LISTED IN PART 1 OF SCHEDULE 1
7. A person subject to this notice shall report the following information, with respect to a given calendar year, in respect of each substance listed in Part 1 of Schedule 1 for which the criteria in Part 1 of Schedule 3 have been satisfied:
- (a) the identity of the substance, including, if applicable, its CAS RN;
- (b) the nature of the manufacturing, if applicable, listed separately by on-site use or processing, for sale or distribution, as a by-product, or as an impurity;
- (c) the nature of the processing, if applicable, listed separately as a reactant, as a formulation component, as an article component, for repackaging only, or as a by-product;
- (d) the nature of the other use, if applicable, listed separately as a physical or chemical processing aid, as a manufacturing aid, for ancillary or other use, or as a by-product;
- (e) the quantity released to air, stated separately by stack or point releases, storage or handling releases, fugitive releases, spills or other non-point releases;
- (f) the quantity released to surface waters, stated separately by direct discharges, spills, or leaks, and the name of, and quantity released to, each receiving surface water body;
- (g) the quantity released to land, including surface or underground releases, stated separately by spills, leaks, or other releases to land that are not disposals (the nature of other releases must be specified);
- (h) the quantity disposed of on-site to landfill, land application, or underground injection, stated separately by landfill, land application, or underground injection;
- (i) the net quantity disposed of on-site to an area where tailings or waste rock are discarded or stored, and further managed, taking into account any additions or removals of the substance from the area, stated separately by tailings management area or waste rock management area;
- (j) the quantity transferred off-site for disposal, stated separately by landfill, land application, underground injection, tailings management area, waste rock management area, or storage, and the name and street address of, and the quantity transferred to, each receiving facility;
- (k) the quantity transferred off-site for treatment prior to final disposal, stated separately by physical treatment, chemical treatment, biological treatment, incineration or thermal treatment, or treatment in a municipal sewage treatment plant, and the name and street address of, and the quantity transferred to, each receiving facility;
- (l) the quantity transferred off-site for recycling, stated separately by energy recovery, recovery of solvents, recovery of organic substances (not solvents), recovery of metals and metal compounds, recovery of inorganic materials (not metals), recovery of acids or bases, recovery of catalysts, recovery of pollution abatement residues, refining or reuse of used oil, or other, and the name and street address of, and the quantity transferred to, each receiving facility;
- (m) the method used to determine the quantities referred to in paragraphs (e) through (l), listed separately by continuous emission monitoring, predictive emission monitoring, source testing, mass balance, published emission factors, site-specific emission factors, or engineering estimates;
- (n) the concentration of the substance in tailings or waste rock disposed of or transferred off-site for disposal under paragraphs (i) and (j);
- (o) if the quantity of a substance contained in waste rock is excluded pursuant to section 3 of Schedule 3, the relevant permit number, name of issuing authority, applicable provisions, and date issued; or the concentration of sulphur, and if applicable, the ratio of neutralizing potential to acid-generating potential, for the waste rock that is excluded;
- (p) the quarterly breakdown of total releases referred to in paragraphs (e) through (g), by percentage;
- (q) the reasons for changes in quantities of releases referred to in paragraphs (e) through (g), of disposals referred to in paragraphs (h) through (k) and of transfers off-site for recycling referred to in paragraph (l) from the previous year; and
- (r) the reasons for disposals and the reasons for transfers off-site for recycling.
8. For the purpose of section 7, in respect of total reduced sulphur, the person shall only report the information identified in section 7, paragraphs (a) through (e) and (m) through (r).
9. A person subject to this notice shall report information in respect of a substance listed in
- (a) Group A in Part 1 of Schedule 1 in tonnes; or
- (b) Group B in Part 1 of Schedule 1 in kilograms.
PART 2
INFORMATION TO PROVIDE RESPECTING SUBSTANCES LISTED IN PART 2 OF SCHEDULE 1
10. If the criteria in Part 2 of Schedule 3 have been satisfied, a person subject to this notice shall report the information required in section 7, paragraphs (a) through (r), of this Schedule in respect of substances listed in Part 2 of Schedule 1, with respect to a given calendar year, in kilograms, and in accordance with the following:
- (a) if information on an individual substance is available, and that substance is released, disposed of, or transferred off-site for recycling in a quantity of 5 kg or more, the person shall report information in respect of the individual substance; or
- (b) if information on individual substances is not available, the person shall report the information as total unspeciated polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons.
11. For the purpose of section 10, the person shall only report information relating to incidental manufacture, generation of tailings, or wood preservation using creosote.
PART 3
INFORMATION TO PROVIDE RESPECTING SUBSTANCES LISTED IN PART 3 OF SCHEDULE 1
12. (1) A person subject to this notice shall report, with respect to a given calendar year, the information required in section 7, paragraphs (a) through (r), of this Schedule in respect of substances listed in Part 3 of Schedule 1, if the criteria in Part 3 of Schedule 3 have been satisfied.
(2) For the purpose of this Part, the toxic equivalent shall be the sum of the masses or concentrations of individual congeners of polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins and polychlorinated dibenzofurans multiplied by weighting factors set out in column 3 of Table 3.
13. For the purpose of section 12, the person shall only report information relating to the incidental manufacture of the substance from activities identified in section 9 of Schedule 3 or the presence of the substance as a contaminant in pentachlorophenol used for wood preservation.
14. In respect of the information required under section 7, paragraphs (e) through (l), pursuant to section 12, if the method of estimation is monitoring or source testing, a person subject to this notice shall indicate whether the concentration of the substance is less than, equal to or greater than the estimated level of quantification set out in section 16 for that substance in the corresponding medium.
15. If the method of estimation is monitoring or source testing, and the concentration of the substance is less than the estimated level of quantification set out in section 16 for that substance in the corresponding medium, the information requirements of section 7, paragraphs (e) through (l), pursuant to section 12, do not apply for that substance.
16. For the purpose of sections 14 and 15, the estimated level-of-quantification values for substances listed in Part 3 of Schedule 1 are
- (a) 32 picograms toxic equivalent of dioxins and furans per cubic metre of gaseous material;
- (b) 20 picograms toxic equivalent of dioxins and furans per litre of liquid material;
- (c) 9 picograms toxic equivalent of dioxins and furans per gram of solid material;
- (d) 6 nanograms of hexachlorobenzene per cubic metre of gaseous material;
- (e) 70 nanograms of hexachlorobenzene per litre of liquid material; and
- (f) 2 nanograms of hexachlorobenzene per gram of solid material.
17. A person subject to this notice shall report information in respect of substances listed in Part 3 of Schedule 1, in accordance with the following:
- (a) if information on individual substances is available, the person shall report information in respect of the individual substances in grams;
- (b) if information on total dioxins and furans is available, but information on individual substances is not available, the person shall report total dioxins and furans in grams toxic equivalent; or
- (c) if no information is available to determine a quantity required to be reported for a substance, the person shall report “no information available” for that quantity.
Item | Column 1 Substance in Part 3 of Schedule 1 |
Column 2 CAS Registry Number (see reference 9†) |
Column 3 Toxicity Equivalent Weighting Factor |
---|---|---|---|
1. | 2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin | 1746-01-6 | 1 |
2. | 1,2,3,7,8-Pentachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin | 40321-76-4 | 0.5 |
3. | 1,2,3,4,7,8-Hexachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin | 39227-28-6 | 0.1 |
4. | 1,2,3,7,8,9-Hexachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin | 19408-74-3 | 0.1 |
5. | 1,2,3,6,7,8-Hexachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin | 57653-85-7 | 0.1 |
6. | 1,2,3,4,6,7,8-Heptachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin | 35822-46-9 | 0.01 |
7. | Octachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin | 3268-87-9 | 0.001 |
8. | 2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzofuran | 51207-31-9 | 0.1 |
9. | 2,3,4,7,8-Pentachlorodibenzofuran | 57117-31-4 | 0.5 |
10. | 1,2,3,7,8-Pentachlorodibenzofuran | 57117-41-6 | 0.05 |
11. | 1,2,3,4,7,8-Hexachlorodibenzofuran | 70648-26-9 | 0.1 |
12. | 1,2,3,7,8,9-Hexachlorodibenzofuran | 72918-21-9 | 0.1 |
13. | 1,2,3,6,7,8-Hexachlorodibenzofuran | 57117-44-9 | 0.1 |
14. | 2,3,4,6,7,8-Hexachlorodibenzofuran | 60851-34-5 | 0.1 |
15. | 1,2,3,4,6,7,8-Heptachlorodibenzofuran | 67562-39-4 | 0.01 |
16. | 1,2,3,4,7,8,9-Heptachlorodibenzofuran | 55673-89-7 | 0.01 |
17. | Octachlorodibenzofuran | 39001-02-0 | 0.001 |
PART 4
INFORMATION TO PROVIDE RESPECTING SUBSTANCES LISTED IN PART 4 OF SCHEDULE 1
18. A person subject to this notice shall report the following information, with respect to a given calendar year, in respect of each substance listed in Part 4 of Schedule 1 for which the criteria in Part 4 of Schedule 3 have been satisfied:
- (a) the identity of the substance, including, if applicable, its CAS RN;
- (b) the quantity released to air, stated separately by stack or point releases, storage or handling releases, fugitive releases, spills, road dust or other non-point releases;
- (c) for each stack with a height of 50 m or more above grade, if the substance is released to air from the stack in a quantity equal to or greater than the minimum quantity set out in column 2 of Table 4 corresponding to that substance,
- (i) the quantity of the substance that is released from the stack, and
- (ii) the stack height above grade, the equivalent diameter of the stack, the average exit velocity of the release, and the average exit temperature of the release;
- (d) the method used to determine the quantities reported pursuant to paragraph (b) and subparagraph (c)(i), listed separately by continuous emission monitoring, predictive emission monitoring, source testing, mass balance, published emission factors, site-specific emission factors, or engineering estimates;
- (e) the monthly breakdown of releases to air by percentage; and
- (f) the reasons for changes in quantities of releases to air from the previous year.
Item | Column 1 Substance Name |
Column 2 Minimum Quantity Released from Stack |
---|---|---|
1. | Carbon monoxide | 5 tonnes |
2. | Nitrogen oxides | 5 tonnes |
3. | PM2.5 | 0.15 tonnes |
4. | PM10 | 0.25 tonnes |
5. | Sulphur dioxide | 5 tonnes |
6. | Total particulate matter | 5 tonnes |
7. | Volatile organic compounds | 5 tonnes |
19. For the purpose of section 18 of this Schedule, if the criteria set out in section 11 of Schedule 3 are satisfied, the person subject to this notice shall report information on quantities of substances released to air from stationary combustion equipment only.
20. A person subject to this notice shall report information in respect of a substance listed in Part 4 of Schedule 1 in tonnes.
PART 5
INFORMATION TO PROVIDE RESPECTING SUBSTANCES LISTED IN PART 5 OF SCHEDULE 1
21. A person subject to this notice shall report the following information, with respect to a given calendar year, in respect of each substance listed in Part 5 of Schedule 1 for which the criteria in Part 5 of Schedule 3 have been satisfied:
- (a) the identity of the substance, including, if applicable, its CAS RN;
- (b) the quantity released to air, from each stack with a height of 50 m or more, if the quantity of volatile organic compounds released to air from the stack is 5 tonnes or more; and
- (c) the quantity of all other releases to air excluding those quantities reported under paragraph (b).
22. For the purpose of section 21 of this Schedule, if the criteria set out in section 11 of Schedule 3 for volatile organic compounds are satisfied, the person subject to this notice shall report information on quantities of substances released to air from stationary combustion equipment only.
23. A person subject to this notice shall report information in respect of a substance listed in Part 5 of Schedule 1 in tonnes.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
(This note is not part of the notice.)
Users should take note that this notice sets out the requirements for reporting to the NPRI for two individual calendar years — 2014 and 2015. Information for the 2014 calendar year must be submitted by June 1, 2015. Information for the 2015 calendar year must be submitted by June 1, 2016.
Users of this notice should take note of the changes to reporting requirements, as described below, which are in effect as of the 2014 calendar year. Consultations were undertaken with respect to these changes. Information on the rationale for these changes is available on the NPRI Web site at www.ec.gc.ca/npri.
Substances added to the NPRI substance list
- 2-(2-Methoxyethoxy)ethanol (CAS RN 111-77-3) has been added to the list of Schedule 1, Part 1, Group A substances (10-tonne mass threshold, 1% concentration threshold).
- Thallium (and its compounds) has been added to the list of Part 1, Group B substances (100-kg mass threshold, 1% concentration threshold).
Reduced thresholds
Eight substances or substance groups have been moved from Part 1, Group A to Part 1, Group B:
- Acrylonitrile (CAS RN 107-13-1),
- Bisphenol A (CAS RN 80-05-7),
- Hydrazine (and its salts) (CAS RN 302-01-2),
- Isoprene (CAS RN 78-79-5),
- Nonylphenol and its ethoxylates,
- Toluene-2,4-diisocyanate (CAS RN 584-84-9),
- Toluene-2,6-diisocyanate (CAS RN 91-08-7), and
- Toluenediisocyanate (mixed isomers) (CAS RN 26471-62-5).
The mass threshold for these substances has been reduced from 10 tonnes, and, in some cases, the concentration threshold has been reduced from 1% (see Schedule 3, Table 1).
Quinoline
Quinoline (CAS RN 91-22-5) has been moved from Part 1, Group A to Part 2 (polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons [PAHs]). The 10-tonne mass threshold has been reduced to 50 kg for total PAHs, including quinoline, and 5 kg for reporting quinoline itself.
Deleted substances
Five substances have been removed from the Part 1, Group A list:
- Allyl chloride (CAS RN 107-05-1),
- C.I. Solvent Orange 7 (CAS RN 3118-97-6),
- 3-Chloro-2-methyl-1-propene (CAS RN 563-47-3),
- Ethyl chloroformate (CAS RN 541-41-3), and
- 1-Bromo-2-chloroethane (CAS RN 107-04-0).
Total reduced sulphur
The requirement to report releases to land and water, disposals, and transfers for recycling for total reduced sulphur has been removed. Only releases of total reduced sulphur to air are required to be reported.
Underground releases
Environmental Petition 317, submitted to the Office of the Auditor General of Canada in June 2011, requested that companies be required to report substances released through the use of hydraulic fracturing fluids to extract shale gas, and the injection of solvents at in situ oil sands facilities. In developing this notice, Environment Canada considered possible changes to the NPRI requirements to address the requests in Petition 317.
In response to the request for reporting of solvent use for in situ oil sands facilities, it has been made explicit in this notice that releases to land that are not for the purposes of disposal are to include both underground and surface releases, to ensure that it is clear that underground releases must be reported.
No changes were made related to reporting of substances used in hydraulic fracturing fluid. Therefore, the exemption for oil and gas exploration and drilling and the 20 000-hour employee threshold continue to apply to hydraulic fracturing activities.
The National Pollutant Release Inventory — Background information
The NPRI is Canada's legislated, publicly accessible inventory of pollutant releases, disposals and recycling. It includes information collected from facilities under the authority of section 46 of the Canadian Environmental Protection Act, 1999 (the Act), together with air pollutant emission estimates compiled by Environment Canada for facilities that are not required to report and for non-industrial sources such as motor vehicles, residential heating, forest fires and agriculture.
The Act contains information-gathering provisions, which allow the Minister of the Environment to require reporting of information on certain substances. The provisions also require the Minister to establish and publish a national inventory of releases of pollutants. These provisions under the Act form the primary legislative basis for the NPRI.
For the latest reporting year, over 7 700 industrial, commercial and other facilities reported to Environment Canada on their releases, disposals and transfers for recycling of more than 300 substances of concern. Air pollutant emission estimates for other facilities and non-industrial sources were also compiled for air pollutants contributing to smog, acid rain and/or poor air quality, selected heavy metals and persistent organic pollutants.
The NPRI is at the centre of the Government of Canada's efforts to track toxic substances and other substances of concern. It is a key tool for identifying and monitoring sources of pollution in Canada, as well as for developing indicators for the quality of our air, water and land. Information collected through the NPRI is used for chemicals management initiatives and it is made publicly available to Canadians each year. Public access to the NPRI motivates industry to prevent and reduce pollutant releases. NPRI data helps the Government of Canada to track progress in pollution prevention, evaluate releases and transfers of substances of concern, identify environmental priorities, conduct air quality modelling, and implement policy initiatives and risk management measures.
For more information on the NPRI, including guidance documents, annual summary reports, and access to the NPRI data in a variety of formats, including an online search and databases, please visit the NPRI Web site at www.ec.gc.ca/inrp-npri.
Input from stakeholders and other interested parties on the NPRI is welcome. Contact information is provided at the beginning of this notice.
Reporting to the National Pollutant Release Inventory
Reporting requirements outlined in this notice are now collected via Environment Canada's Single Window reporting system (see http://ec.gc.ca/gu-sw for more information).
For those who meet the requirements of this notice, reporting is mandatory. Obtaining the relevant guidance documents is the responsibility of the person required to report under this notice. Visit the NPRI Web site (www.ec.gc.ca/npri) or contact Environment Canada at the address provided at the beginning of this notice for guidance documents.
Changes to contacts, ownership and reported information
It is important that contact and ownership information be kept up to date and any errors in submitted data be corrected in a timely manner, so that the information provided by the NPRI continues to be relevant and accurate. Therefore, persons who submitted reports for a previous year are strongly encouraged to update their information, through the Single Window reporting system or by contacting Environment Canada directly, if
- there has been a change in the name, address, telephone number, or email address of the contacts identified for the facility since the submission of the report for the previous year;
- there is a change in the owner or operator of a facility for which a report has been submitted for the previous year; or
- the person becomes aware that the information submitted for any previous year was mistaken or inaccurate.
If a person is providing an update to previously submitted information, the person should indicate the reason the information is being updated.
Compliance with the Canadian Environmental Protection Act, 1999 is mandatory
Compliance with the Canadian Environmental Protection Act, 1999 (hereinafter referred to as the “Act”) is mandatory pursuant to subsections 272(1) and 272.1(1) of the Act. Amendments to the fine scheme of the Act came into force on June 22, 2012. Subsections 272(2), (3) and (4) and 272.1(2), (3) and (4) of the Act set the penalties for persons who commit an offence under the Act. Offences include failing to comply with an obligation arising from the Act and providing false or misleading information. Penalties for offences can result, upon conviction (either summary conviction or indictment), in fines of not more than $12 million, imprisonment for a term of not more than three years, or both.
The current text of the Act, including the most recent amendments, is available on the Department of Justice's Web site: http://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/acts/C-15.31.
The Act is enforced in accordance with the Compliance and Enforcement Policy for the Canadian Environmental Protection Act, 1999, available at www.ec.gc.ca/lcpe-cepa/default.asp?lang= En&n=5082BFBE-1. Suspected violations under the Act can be reported to the Enforcement Branch by email at environmental.enforcement@ec.gc.ca.
[28-1-o]
DEPARTMENT OF INDUSTRY
OFFICE OF THE REGISTRAR GENERAL
Name and position | Order in Council |
---|---|
Bank of Canada | |
Directors of the Board of Directors | |
Betts, Norman | 2014-759 |
Borger, Alan | 2014-758 |
Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act | |
Official Receivers | 2014-691 |
Bilyk, Carolyn | |
Chalifoux, Madeleine | |
Provenzano, Eva | |
Zebedee, Helen | |
Biedermann, Julia | 2014-702 |
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council | |
Member | |
Borbey, Patrick | 2014-846 |
Associate Deputy Minister of Canadian Heritage | |
Bourgeois, The Hon. Cindy A. | 2014-804 |
Nova Scotia Court of Appeal | |
Judge | |
Burger, George | 2014-760 |
Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation | |
Director of the Board of Directors | |
Byers, Rick | 2014-761 |
PPP Canada Inc. | |
Director of the Board of Directors | |
Campbell, The Hon. Jamie S. | 2014-805 |
Supreme Court of Nova Scotia | |
Judge | |
Nova Scotia Court of Appeal | |
Judge ex officio | |
Canada Pension Plan Investment Board | |
Director of the board of directors and Chairperson of the board of directors | |
Munroe-Blum, Heather, O.C., Q.C. | 2014-853 |
Directors of the Board of Directors | |
Brooks, Robert L. | 2014-850 |
Sheriff, Karen | 2014-851 |
Zurel, Jo Mark | 2014-852 |
Canadian Human Rights Tribunal | |
Chairperson | |
Thomas, David L. | 2014-749 |
Part-time member | |
Mintz, Judy C. | 2014-748 |
Canadian Institutes of Health Research | |
Members of the Governing Council | |
Caron, Nadine | 2014-711 |
Davies, Maura | 2014-713 |
Ornstein, Amy E. | 2014-715 |
Power, Christine | 2014-712 |
Young, Terry-Lynn | 2014-714 |
Canadian International Trade Tribunal | |
Permanent members | |
Bédard, Jean, Q.C. | 2014-756 |
Downey, Jason | 2014-757 |
Canadian Transportation Accident Investigation and Safety Board | |
Full-time member and Chairperson | |
Fox, Kathleen Carol | 2014-792 |
Part-time member | |
Ackermans, Faye | 2014-793 |
Canadian Transportation Agency | |
Members | |
Campbell, Stephen Douglas | 2014-768 |
Fitzgerald, Peter Paul | 2014-767 |
McMurray, William George Avery | 2014-766 |
Citizenship Act | |
Citizenship judges — Part-time basis | |
Gravill, Larry | 2014-704 |
Siew, Nancy | 2014-706 |
Taschereau, Myriam | 2014-707 |
Wong, Albert | 2014-705 |
Court of Appeal of the Province of Quebec | |
Puisne Judges | |
Émond, The Hon. Jean-François | 2014-802 |
Mainville, The Hon. Robert | 2014-800 |
Schrager, The Hon. Mark | 2014-801 |
Court of Queen's Bench of Alberta | |
Justices | |
Court of Appeal of Alberta | |
Members ex officio | |
Ackerl, Larry R. A., Q.C. | 2014-807 |
Nixon, D. Blair, Q.C. | 2014-808 |
Dawson, Mary Elizabeth, C.M., Q.C. | 2014-694 |
Conflict of Interest and Ethics Commissioner | |
Divaris, Gerassimos | 2014-700 |
Payments in Lieu of Taxes Act | |
Member — Advisory panel | |
Doan, Doug | 2014-791 |
Gwich'in Land Claim Settlement Act | |
Renewable Resources Board | |
Member |
|
Dupont, Serge | 2014-841 |
Privy Council Office | |
Senior Advisor | |
Dupras, Yves | 2014-740 |
Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission | |
Full-time member | |
Ebbs, Catherine | 2014-739 |
Public Service Labour Relations Board | |
Chairperson | |
Federal Court | |
Judges | |
Federal Court of Appeal | |
Members ex officio | |
Boswell, Keith M., Q.C. | 2014-797 |
Brown, Henry S., Q.C. | 2014-796 |
Diner, Alan | 2014-798 |
Fenske, Allan F., Q.C. | 2014-755 |
Military Grievances External Review Committee | |
Part-time member | |
First Nations Financial Management Board | |
Directors of the board of directors | |
Jha, Aditya | 2014-789 |
Titus, Brian | 2014-788 |
Fortin, Michel | 2014-803 |
Superior Court for the district of Québec, in the Province of Quebec | |
Puisne Judge | |
Giliberti, Carolina | 2014-845 |
Canadian Food Inspection Agency | |
Executive Vice-President | |
Government of Newfoundland and Labrador | 2014-695 |
Administrators | |
Dunn, The Hon. Maureen A. | |
June 25 to June 28, 2014 | |
Welsh, The Hon. B. Gale | |
June 16 to June 20 and June 29 to July 12, 2014 | |
Government of Saskatchewan | 2014-826 |
Administrators | |
Lane, The Hon. Gary | |
July 13 to August 2, 2014 | |
Whitmore, The Hon. Peter A. | |
August 9 to August 16, 2014 | |
Graham, Connie Lois | 2014-770 |
The Federal Bridge Corporation Limited | |
Chairperson of the board of directors | |
Hamilton, Bob | 2014-842 |
Deputy Minister of Natural Resources | |
Heggelund, Merete | 2014-753 |
Standards Council of Canada | |
Member | |
Henderson, David L. | 2014-772 |
Halifax Port Authority | |
Director | |
Henney, Kimberley | 2014-747 |
Canadian Centre for Occupational Health and Safety | |
Governor of the Council | |
Hoffort, Michael | 2014-782 |
Farm Credit Canada | |
President and Chief Executive Officer | |
Ilich, Olga | 2014-754 |
Canadian Tourism Commission | |
Director of the Board of Directors | |
Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada | |
Full-time members | |
Doyle, Elaine | 2014-709 |
Leduc, Normand | 2014-710 |
Lowe, David J. | 2014-708 |
Indian Residential Schools Truth and Reconciliation Commission | |
Commissioners | |
Littlechild, Wilton | 2014-765 |
Wilson, Marie | 2014-764 |
Commissioner and Chairperson | |
Sinclair, Murray | 2014-763 |
International Development Research Centre | |
Governors of the Board of Governors | |
Fountain Smith, Sarah | 2014-718 |
Termorshuizen, Cindy | 2014-717 |
Jerke, The Hon. Rodney A. | 2014-827 |
Nunavut Court of Justice | |
Deputy judge | |
Kavanagh, Sarah | 2014-781 |
Canada Foundation for Sustainable Development Technology | |
Director | |
King, Janet | 2014-847 |
Canadian Northern Economic Development Agency | |
President | |
Klyszejko, Erika | 2014-696 |
Lake of the Woods Control Board | |
Alternate to the federal member | |
Kobernick, Carolyn P. | 2014-716 |
Patented Medicine Prices Review Board | |
Member | |
Lacoursière, Alain | 2014-738 |
Canadian Cultural Property Export Review Board | |
Member | |
Layh, Donald H., Q.C. | 2014-806 |
Her Majesty's Court of Queen's Bench for Saskatchewan | |
Judge | |
Levonian, Louise | 2014-844 |
Associate Deputy Minister of Employment and Social Development to be styled Senior Associate Deputy Minister of Employment and Social Development and Chief Operating Officer for Service Canada | |
and | |
Commissioner of the Canada Employment Insurance Commission who shall be the Vice-Chairperson of the Commission | |
Majeau, Claude | 2014-750 |
Copyright Board | |
Vice-chairman | |
Martin, Guy | 2014-746 |
The Jacques-Cartier and Champlain Bridges Inc. | |
Director of the Board of Directors | |
Martin, Michael | 2014-843 |
Deputy Minister of the Environment | |
McPhail, Ian D. C., Q.C. | 2014-794 |
Royal Canadian Mounted Police Public Complaints Commission | |
Chairman | |
Mercier, Lyne | 2014-780 |
National Energy Board | |
Member and Vice-Chairperson | |
Mintz, Jack Maurice | 2014-752 |
Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council | |
Member and Vice-President | |
National Aboriginal Economic Development Board | |
Members | |
Broomfield, Hilda J. | 2014-784 |
Delorme, Marie | 2014-785 |
Williams, Ruth | 2014-783 |
National Museum of Science and Technology | |
Director | |
Benay, Alex | 2014-735 |
Trustee of the Board of Trustees | |
Cohen, David James | 2014-737 |
Vice-Chairperson of the Board of Trustees | |
Silye, Jim | 2014-736 |
Parole Board of Canada | |
Full-time members | |
Allard, René | 2014-722 |
Corcoran, Kevin P. | 2014-723 |
Dantzer, Alex | 2014-724 |
Full-time member and Chairperson | |
Cenaiko, Harvey | 2014-719 |
Full-time member and Executive Vice-Chairperson | |
Pelletier, Marie-France | 2014-720 |
Full-time member and Vice-Chairperson | |
Bouchard, Jacques | 2014-721 |
Part-time members | |
Frenette, Marie Claude | 2014-725 |
Hiebert, Jacob H. | 2014-727 |
Lacroix, Hélène | 2014-726 |
Nettie, Scott W. | 2014-697 |
Pinto, B. Mario | 2014-751 |
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council | |
President | |
Pratt, Michael | 2014-771 |
Great Lakes Pilotage Authority | |
Member | |
Public Service Pension Advisory Committee | |
Members | |
Aylward, Christopher | 2014-728 |
Benson, Robyn | 2014-730 |
Bittman, Shannon | 2014-729 |
Puddister, Louis | 2014-734 |
National Film Board | |
Member | |
Restall, William Arthur | 2014-769 |
Canadian Air Transport Security Authority | |
Director of the board of directors | |
Robillard, Claude | 2014-732 |
Canadian Commercial Corporation | |
Director of the Board of Directors | |
Rudin, Jeremy | 2014-762 |
Superintendent of Financial Institutions | |
Sackett, Margot | 2014-703 |
Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada | |
Member | |
Shewchuk, Daniel Mark | 2014-790 |
Nunavut Wildlife Management Board | |
Member | |
Social Security Tribunal | |
Income Security Section | |
Full-time members | |
Martel, John |
2014-744 |
Russell, Shannon |
2014-745 |
Temkin, Kelly |
2014-742 |
Wilton, Carol |
2014-743 |
Steiner, Jeffrey | 2014-699 |
Export Development Canada | |
Director of the Board of Directors | |
Stovel, Gordon F. | 2014-701 |
Canada Foundation for Innovation | |
Director of the board of directors | |
Strathy, The Hon. George R. | 2014-799 |
Court of Appeal for Ontario | |
Chief Justice of Ontario who shall be president | |
Superior Court of Justice in and for the Province of Ontario | |
Member ex officio | |
Veterans Review and Appeal Board | |
Permanent member and Deputy Chairperson | |
Jarmyn, Thomas W. | 2014-731 |
Permanent member | |
Martel, Serge | 2014-698 |
Via Rail Canada Inc. | |
Directors of the Board of Directors | |
Robinson, Deborah Wallis | 2014-775 |
Sonberg, Melissa Shari | 2014-773 |
Wheatley, William M. | 2014-774 |
Walsh, Grant Byron | 2014-733 |
Canada Lands Company Limited | |
Chairperson of the board of directors | |
Watson, Peter | 2014-779 |
National Energy Board | |
Member — full-time basis and Chairman | |
Western Arctic (Inuvialuit) Claims Settlement Act | |
Arbitration Board | |
Member | |
Williams, Jack |
2014-787 |
Vice-Chairman | |
Iatridis, Gloria |
2014-786 |
Windsor-Detroit Bridge Authority | |
Chairperson | |
McQueen, Mark R. | 2014-795 |
Chief Executive Officer | |
Michele (Michael) Cautillo | 2014-776 |
Directors of the board of directors | |
Graham, William Alvin | 2014-778 |
Mulroney Lapham, Caroline | 2014-777 |
Wister, Andrew Victor | 2014-741 |
National Seniors Council | |
Chairperson |
June 27, 2014
DIANE BÉLANGER
Official Documents Registrar
[28-1-o]
DEPARTMENT OF INDUSTRY
RADIOCOMMUNICATION ACT
Notice No. DGSO-002-14 — Decision on Amendments to Industry Canada's Antenna Tower Siting Procedures
This notice announces the release of the document entitled Decision on Amendments to Industry Canada's Antenna Tower Siting Procedures, which sets out the Department's decisions resulting from the consultation process undertaken through Canada Gazette Notice No. DGSO-001-14 — Consultation on Amendments to Industry Canada's Antenna Tower Siting Procedures. Comments received in response to the consultation are available on Industry Canada's Web site at www.ic.gc.ca/eic/site/smt-gst.nsf/eng/sf10804.html.
These decisions are reflected in Industry Canada's Client Procedures Circular CPC-2-0-03, Radiocommunication and Broadcasting Antenna Systems, Issue 5, which becomes effective July 15, 2014, for all new antenna system proposals and in relation to all ongoing obligations.
These improvements will strengthen the requirements for the wireless industry to consult with local residents, increase transparency for municipalities and improve communications throughout the tower siting process.
Obtaining copies
Copies of this notice and of documents referred to herein are available electronically on Industry Canada's Spectrum Management and Telecommunications Web site at www.ic.gc.ca/spectrum.
Official versions of Canada Gazette notices can be viewed at www.gazette.gc.ca/rp-pr/p1/index-eng.html.
June 26, 2014
PETER HILL
Director General
Spectrum Management Operations Branch
[28-1-o]
DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY AND EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS
CRIMINAL CODE
Designation as fingerprint examiner
Pursuant to subsection 667(5) of the Criminal Code, I hereby designate the following persons of the New Westminster Police Department as fingerprint examiners:
- Dwayne Raymond
- Trevor Robinson
Ottawa, June 25, 2014
KATHY THOMPSON
Assistant Deputy Minister
Community Safety and Countering Crime Branch
[28-1-o]
NOTICE OF VACANCY
HOUSE OF COMMONS
Law Clerk and Parliamentary Counsel (full-time position)
Salary range: From $147,400 to $173,300
Location: National Capital Region
The Law Clerk and Parliamentary Counsel is responsible for providing legal advice to members of Parliament, the House of Commons standing committees and the Administration, including the Board of Internal Economy. He or she may intervene in court actions on behalf of the Speaker of the House of Commons or members of Parliament (members) to ensure that parliamentary rights and immunities are respected. The Office of the Law Clerk and Parliamentary Counsel also provides legislative assistance to members in drafting private members' bills and motions to amend bills, and ensures that bills are correctly printed or reprinted with amendments as approved by the House of Commons (the House) or one of its committees and when ultimately enacted as Acts of Parliament.
The successful candidate would possess a degree in law from a recognized university and must be a member of at least 10 years' standing of the bar of any province or territory of Canada or the Chambre des notaires du Québec. Graduate studies in constitutional and/or public law would be an asset.
The ideal candidate would have leadership and management experience at the senior executive level in a public or private sector organization, preferably in a legal or judicial context, and at the federal level. Experience in providing strategic advice and making decisions on complex and sensitive issues, as well as experience in negotiating and achieving consensus on complex issues among a variety of stakeholders with competing objectives, is desired. Experience with the legislative process, in the preparation and amendment of legislation, and in dealing with parliamentarians/legislators would be an asset.
The ideal candidate would be knowledgeable about the mandate, role and responsibilities of the Law Clerk and Parliamentary Counsel, as well as the legislative framework within which he or she carries out the mandate, in particular the Parliament of Canada Act; the Constitution Act, 1867 and the Constitution Act, 1982, including the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms; the Canada Elections Act; the Parliamentary Employment and Staff Relations Act; the Official Languages Act and other federal laws applicable to the House of Commons. Substantial understanding of the constitutional role, responsibilities and practices of the Crown, the Parliament of Canada and the Government of Canada, particularly the roles and responsibilities of the House of Commons and the Senate, and of the law of parliamentary privilege, is desired. He or she would also possess substantial knowledge of the legal framework governing public institutions at the federal level based on law and practice and knowledge of current legislative initiatives.
The qualified candidate would possess strong leadership and managerial skills as well as have the ability to provide impartial and authoritative advice and support on procedural and legal matters to the Speaker of the House, the Clerk of the House and the Board of Internal Economy. The ability to effectively frame legal issues and deliver legal advice to members, including before House committees, and to respond to complex situations with multiple competing interests in a partisan environment, is desired. In addition to having the ability to effectively advise senior managers of the House on administrative and governance matters, the ideal candidate would also be able to interpret relevant statutes, analyze differing opinions and complex situations and respond strategically and reasonably, with a view to making recommendations that are fair and equitable. The ideal candidate would possess superior communication skills, both written and oral.
The ideal candidate would possess sound judgment in a highly stressful environment and excellent interpersonal skills. He or she should be decisive, impartial, tactful and discreet. Finally, the ideal candidate would possess integrity and high ethical standards.
Proficiency in both official languages is essential.
The successful candidate must reside in or be prepared to relocate to the National Capital Region or to a location within reasonable commuting distance, and will be frequently required to work long hours due to House of Commons and member of Parliament business associated with regular and extended sittings and frequent urgencies that arise.
The Government is committed to ensuring that its appointments are representative of Canada's regions and official languages, as well as of women, Aboriginal peoples, disabled persons and visible minorities.
The selected candidate must comply with the Ethical and Political Activity Guidelines for Public Office Holders. The Guidelines are available on the Governor in Council Appointments Web site, under “Reference Material,” at www.appointments-nominations.gc.ca/index.asp?lang=eng.
The selected candidate will be subject to the Conflict of Interest Act. Public office holders appointed on a full-time basis must submit to the Office of the Conflict of Interest and Ethics Commissioner, within 60 days of appointment, a confidential report in which they disclose all of their assets, liabilities and outside activities. For more information, please visit the Office of the Conflict of Interest and Ethics Commissioner's Web site at http://ciec-ccie.gc.ca/Default.aspx?pid=1&lang=en.
This notice has been placed in the Canada Gazette to assist the Governor in Council in identifying qualified candidates for this position. It is not, however, intended to be the sole means of recruitment.
Should you be interested in learning more about this leadership opportunity, please visit www.boyden.com for the full job specification. To apply in confidence, please forward your curriculum vitae and letter of introduction to Eric Lathrop at elathrop@boyden.com. All submissions will be acknowledged.
English and French notices of vacancies will be produced in an alternative format upon request. For further information, please contact GICA-NGEC@pco-bcp.gc.ca.
[28-1-o]