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On 22 April 2016, the Queensland Parliament passed the Environmental Protection (Chain of Responsibility) Act 2016 (Qld) (EPCOR Act), which proposes to introduce various measures to expand the scope of liability for corporates, their associated entities, officers, and financiers under the Environmental Protection Act 1994 (Qld) (EP Act).
For an overview of the Bill, see our previously published article.1
The EPCOR Act makes a number of key changes to the original Bill, including:
The EPCOR Act commenced on 27 April 2016, with the operation of the provisions to be reviewed by the Minister in 2 years to decide whether they remain appropriate.
The EPCOR Act provides that the DEHP, in deciding whether to issue an EPO to a related person, may consider whether the related person took all reasonable steps, having regard to the extent to which the person was in a position to influence the company’s conduct, to ensure the company:
Firstly, this is not a mandatory consideration. The DEHP may choose to disregard whether a related person took all reasonable steps to ensure compliance should the circumstances warrant it.
Secondly, the introduction of a ‘reasonable steps’ obligation raises a range of questions as to what constitutes reasonable due diligence for an investor, financier or parent company in respect of another company’s environmental obligations.
The EPCOR Act enables the DEHP to issue an EPO to a related person who is capable of significantly benefiting financially, or has significantly benefited financially, from the carrying out of the relevant activity by the company.
This is a higher threshold than what was included in the original Bill, which required only that the related person ‘benefit financially’.
The EPCOR Act provides that a person is a related person of a company if, among other things:
This is considerably narrower than the original Bill, under which any landowner could be a related person of a company undertaking relevant activities on the land. The amendments mean that, where a company is undertaking resource activities on land which they do not own, the underlying landowner will not automatically be subject to liability as a related person.
The EPCOR Act also provides that a person who benefits financially under a native title or Aboriginal cultural heritage agreement, a conduct and compensation agreement, or a make good agreement for a water bore is not a related person by virtue of that financial benefit.
The original Bill allowed the DEHP to impose a condition on an environmental authority requiring a financial assurance at the time of any transfer of an environmental authority. The EPCOR Act provides the DEHP with the additional power to impose a condition requiring a financial assurance when the ownership of the holding company changes (ie a share sale).
In deciding whether to issue an EPO to a related person, the DEHP is required to have regard to any relevant statutory guidelines. A timeline for the release of any such guidelines has not yet been announced. The Minister has indicated that the guidelines will be developed in consultation with business and industry. Concerned companies and investors should consider becoming involved in that process.
The EPCOR Act has significant implications for holders of environmental authorities, and for individuals, financiers and entities related to companies that hold environmental authorities.
Those entities will need to develop a clear understanding of the environmental liabilities of the relevant company, consider whether ‘reasonable steps’ are being taking to ensure the relevant company complies with its environmental obligations and address these risks in contractual arrangements.
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