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Colleagues, I'd like to call this meeting to order. This is meeting number 55 of the Standing Committee on International Trade. We are continuing, under Standing Order 108(2), our study on small and medium-sized enterprises.
I would like to welcome all the witnesses who are with us today.
We have with us, from Emovi Inc., Michelle Laflamme, president and chief executive officer, and from Fumoir La Fée des Grèves, Mr. Nicolas Letenneur, vice-president. Écotech Québec is not here yet, but we understand that we will be joined by them shortly. By video conference from Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, we have Prairie Machine and Parts, with Mr. Brandon Hall, operations manager, electric vehicle division.
In deference to technology, and in some fear of technology, we will begin with the video conference from Saskatoon.
Voices: Oh, oh!
The Vice-Chair (Mr. Don Davies): Mr. Hall, you have eight minutes, please.
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Thank you, Mr. Chair and committee members, for letting me speak here today on behalf of small businesses. I appreciate the opportunity to share my experience and observations surrounding the interaction of SMEs and the federal and provincial governments.
I'll start off just briefly by letting you know who I am and where I come from, and why I'm sitting here today. My name's Brandon Hall. I'm the operations manager of Prairie Machine and Parts in Saskatoon. We were a young start-up company started in 2010. We've just recently, as of January, been acquired.
For the background of the company, we started PapaBravo in 2010 to design an electric vehicle for underground mining to replace a traditional diesel truck underground. We started with basically just a few of us in a back-shop garage with a $35,000 contract, running on credit cards and lines of credit.
After our first vehicle delivery and successful deployment in 2010, we began to gain some attraction, both locally and internationally. We were approached by a local industrial technology adviser from NRC, and we were granted a project to further develop our product. This initial input is where we really started to gain some momentum. It afforded us to move to the next level with our company without a high level of financial risk. After this project was successful, we received a large contract from one of the local mines. We actually couldn't afford to deliver on it, as we couldn't afford the parts to manufacture it. This is where the federal government came in. Through BDC, we were able to factor our purchase orders, and by factoring them we were able to access some working capital and deliver on that contract.
Over the next few years, we had some exponential growth. We went from about four employees and $50,000 in sales in 2010 to 45 employees and about $6 million in sales in three years. None of this would have been possible without the support of both the provincial and federal governments.
In terms of trade and export development, both governments, federal and provincial, have afforded us the opportunity to expand faster and smarter than we ever could have without their help, namely the Saskatchewan Trade and Export Partnership and the trade commissioner service.
When I was starting to investigate new markets and how I should go about expanding into new markets and what markets to expand into, the TCS was a really good resource for me in vetting potential customers for a dealer network. Angela Dark out of Saskatoon, the trade commissioner here for the mining sector, would talk to embassies and other trade commissioners and give me a background on the people, so I didn't have to fly there to meet them face to face to see if they were a reasonable fit for our company. As a young start-up with limited cash, this was definitely a big benefit.
Also, the Saskatchewan Trade and Export Partnership, without whom we would never be where we are today, their services, advice, and market research were immeasurable in terms of export success. I would also like to acknowledge the success of the BIAP program through NRC, the business innovation access program. We were able to get a fully funded market research project done through this so we could enter some new markets and have some good, strong intel before entering these markets.
With the success of all these programs and how much they've helped me over the last three or four years, I have noticed some areas that I personally feel could use some improvement or maybe some change. In my experience, the hardest part about expansion, both locally and internationally, is juggling risk with available cashflow. As with any business, cashflow is important.
Expansion plans and new markets can demolish a company's available cash in a hurry. What I would recommend to this committee to investigate would be to develop a program similar to the NRC IRAP program.
It would be more focused and strategic program that would target promising young companies looking to expand and looking to grow into new markets rather than the broad approach, which is all these big programs and everybody has access to them. This would target specific companies through a specific project. I want to expand to this market and the government would afford them some financing, some advisers, some market research, and things like that.
It would not be for every company, which is similar to how the NRC IRAP program is not for everyone. In my experience this more targeted approach would offer a greater return for Canadian taxpayers' dollars.
The second portion that I would recommend to the committee is the marketing of products and services. Starting up a new company basically swallows your life up, 80 hours a week, seven days a week. That was normal for me for the last four years and I know there are dozens of programs and financial aids and services available, but the average Canadian business owner is completely unaware.
While you're working these 80 hour weeks, you don't have time to dedicate to looking up these services. If you could get these products and services into the eyes of Canadian business owners, that could really have a lot more momentum and have a lot more success.
I'm very excited by the level and depth of resources that both the federal and provincial governments are putting into trade and export development. I'm glad to see that the federal government has plans in the budget released last week to expand the trade commissioner service and has earmarked some funding for trade and export.
Thank you for the opportunity to bring my experience and my recommendations. I welcome your questions.
I'd like to extend my sincere thanks to the committee for the opportunity to discuss my company and our journey.
I started Emovi, which stands for emotion, movement and vision, in 2007. When you start a business, all three of those elements come into play. Emovi emerged from university research and technology. In fact, three Canadian universities—CHUM, École de technologie supérieure and École Polytechnique—jointly developed a tool to observe and assess a knee in motion.
People can experience knee pain when they move, play golf, ski or go down a flight of stairs. And the only knee assessment tools doctors have right now are their hands, eyes, x-rays and MRIs. Imaging produces static pictures that provide little or no information on what is causing the patient's symptoms. It's akin to assessing a patient's heart just by listening to the heartbeat, as was the practice years ago.
The same goes for the knee, so doctors don't necessarily have all the tools they need to understand why the patient is experiencing pain. And patients end up in a vicious cycle. They see a doctor, who prescribes them pain medication or something else. If the patient goes back to the doctor, they will undergo an x-ray or MRI before being seen by an orthopedist. And many of the patients waiting to see an orthopedist aren't candidates for surgery. When they finally see the orthopedist—if they do—some six or eight months later, if not a year or two later in Canada, the orthopedist sends them right back to their doctor. So patients suffering from knee pain have a very hard time.
In the early 1990s, the three Canadian universities I mentioned set about examining the issue. Only a few university research teams in the world have studied the problem and been able to acquire a solid understanding of knee joint function. They researched all the symptoms related to knee injury, osteoarthritis of the knee in the aging population and femoral-patellar syndrome, which is common in soldiers and those between the ages of 20 and 40.
I acquired the technology, and together with four hospitals, we started to gather conclusive data in order to obtain approval for the system and the ability to sell it. From 2007 to 2010, clinical trials were conducted, and the technology was tested in a real healthcare setting. In 2010-11, we received regulatory approval from the FDA and Health Canada, as well as CE marking in Europe.
Given that the technology is a medical innovation that represents a new practice for the medical community, it means that doctors have to change their approach to knee assessment. In order to build credibility in the medical community, we had to engage opinion leaders so that they would publish data on the technology and endorse it.
So, not only did we face regulatory barriers, but we also had to overcome credibility issues and the difficulty around integrating the technology into the care continuum, with respect to front-line healthcare providers. After receiving the necessary regulatory approvals, we began marketing the technology in 2011. We called it KneeKG—a nod to EKG, the heart assessment tool.
Our first buyers were opinion leaders from around the world. That process was largely facilitated by Canadian trade commissioners, who introduced us to David Hunter, an opinion leader from Australia in the field of knee osteoarthritis. In 2011, he did a literature review on the subject that appeared in the journal Nature.
Having his support is important for us, knee osteoarthritis being our main market. But the fact of the matter is that, for a Canadian start-up, knocking on the doors of opinion leaders isn't exactly easy, and the trade commissioner service did a lot for us in that regard. Today, we have 20 sales under our belt, including in Australia, thanks to Mr. Hunter, who introduced us to an Australian distributor. So now we have a distribution company in Australia. And we've also made one sale to China. We've sold the technology to buyers in the U.S., France and Canada, as well. Opinion leaders have helped with our initial sales, and that's largely thanks to the help we received.
We have a small team, but what we do requires a lot of funding and investment. In our first few years, until 2012, I provided a significant part of the funding, myself. In 2012, the process of marketing the technology for export became very cost-intensive, so we sought out venture capital.
We applied for BDC funding, but we didn't get it. We did get funding from Fonds Bio-Innovation, which is mainly supported by Quebec's Fonds de solidarité FTQ and the Royal Bank of Canada. We didn't meet the BDC's criteria, but we did meet the Royal Bank's requirements, with a guarantee provided by EDC. That was a major boost for us.
At the same time, we continued our R and D work to keep innovating. We worked on our technology, a product to diagnose the causes of knee symptoms. We took the technology to the diagnostic level. Our system makes it possible to diagnose whether a patient has osteoarthritis and a partial tear, patellar syndrome or another problem. From a regulatory standpoint, diagnosis is a more refined step. We received a lot of support from the NRC through IRAP. That gave us the momentum to obtain a critical mass and to introduce our product to frontline health providers. Market demand exists for this kind of diagnostic tool.
So that gives you an overview of what Emovi does. Our team continues to innovate and engage in R and D, but our primary focus is commercializing our system. Commercializing a medical innovation requires a change in medical practices, and that's a big challenge for us. We have to work with medical associations to incorporate information about the new technology into continuing education activities. The Quebec government gave us funding for a major clinical trial involving 2,000 patients. The trial has merely confirmed all the evidence gathered to date. It's being done in a more formal context so that we can incorporate the technology into Quebec's public health system.
In the U.S., we've been able to have Medicare cover the cost of the assessment. That's been a problem in Canada, given that each province has its own plan for reimbursing expenses. In Quebec, it's RAMQ. The U.S. health insurance plan is universal, so we have access to the entire market.
Something that could go a long way towards helping medical companies like ours would be an initiative to harmonize the integration of medical innovations in the public healthcare system. That could be covered under interprovincial agreements, for example. It would make our job easier, because we wouldn't have to duplicate the same process in every province. Right now, we are putting a lot of focus on the U.S. and European markets because, in Canada, we have to follow the same process ten times. It's a tremendous burden that requires a significant amount of time and money.
As far as companies like mine go, I have a hard time wrapping my head around the BDC's criteria and what it's looking for. Traditional banks gave us funding, but not the BDC. The BDC's view was that our company represented too great of a risk. That's an area that may require some clarification.
I have a recommendation. We have a lot of support for R and D and a number of funding opportunities, but when it comes to—
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Good afternoon everyone.
Fumoir La Fée des Grèves is a seafood processing plant located in the Quebec City area. The smokehouse was established in 1994 by my brother and I, Marin and Nicolas Letenneur. We are French immigrants trained in the preparation of high-quality food.
We went into business as soon as we arrived in Canada. While we had few resources, we had a lot of potential. Since our company was created in 1994, we have taken part in a number of international fairs, and each time our products are recognized as among the best smoked salmon in the world. Their subtle maple flavour—distinctively Canadian—wins universal acclaim every time. Our smokehouse methods have attracted a great deal of interest from investors. Quality control is the cornerstone of this Canadian technique.
Smoked salmon is consumed worldwide, but also produced in nearly every country. In most countries, import duties are very high, preventing us from being competitive and selling our products in large quantities there. We have been making high-quality products at our Quebec City plant for 20 years now using our unique recipes and techniques, which are recognized throughout the province.
We are also becoming increasingly known internationally and in various food, restaurant, retail and industrial markets. We always intended to bring our company into the international market. To prepare ourselves, we've learned and invested a lot to meet the industry's highest standards. Since cold-smoked salmon is everywhere, in both industrialized and developing countries, we quickly identified numerous business opportunities for our company.
Given the challenges we faced in exporting our products, we thought about practical ways of establishing ourselves internationally. This strategic thinking led us to the opportunities for technology transfers. Thanks to federal government assistance under the industrial cooperation program and with the help of a specialized company, we created a marketable product in the form of an industrial franchise.
We were invited to Latin America, Asia and the Middle East, where the franchise idea was very well-received, and we worked on technology transfer projects with potentially serious partners.
The first technology transfer we undertook through the industrial cooperation program was on the island of Bali. Once the initial steps were taken, we began implementing the minimum standards required for the local market, with the goal of ultimately meeting the hazard analysis and critical control points—or HACCP—and global food safety initiative—or GFSI—the highest food production standards that allow for exporting. The Bali plant was on the brink of bankruptcy at the time, but today, thanks to this project, it is doing much better and is producing several dozen tons of smoked salmon for the Indonesian market. We subsequently hired additional staff at our Quebec City plant to monitor the progress in Bali.
At the same time, we visited Japan to evaluate the idea of supplying that country from Bali. Given the customs benefits of free trade between these two nations, we immediately saw a terrific opportunity to expand.
Right before the final phase of the technology transfer in Bali, the third in a three-part program, the industrial cooperation program was suddenly shut down, breaking our momentum. Our file had been on hold for several months and was about to be approved. Without government support, we could not take the risk of investing so much money, even though we knew the Asian market was worth hundreds of millions of dollars.
Economically speaking, technology transfer is a very good way for small and medium-sized businesses to expand internationally. It is financially viable, the risks are limited and the difficulties that arise are manageable. We are evidence of that. In addition to Indonesia and Japan, we had requests from Singapore and South Korea, assuring us of a favourable market.
Currently, we are doing a technology transfer in the Middle East. We will not be receiving a share of the profits, other than through royalties.
The industrial cooperation program is an indispensable engine for prosperity for small and medium-sized businesses on the international market. Support from federal and provincial governments is also essential for us to operate internationally. Today's small and medium-sized businesses are tomorrow's multinationals, but they cannot get there without government support. That is why we would love to see the industrial cooperation program reinstated or a similar new program launched. This would enable us to complete our project in Indonesia and start others. Our business strategy is to set up on every continent and compete with major suppliers Norway and Chile, enabling Canada to take its rightful place in this rapidly growing market.
With each foreign project, we hire 5 to 10 more people—depending on project size—at our headquarters in Quebec City to monitor the technology transfer and ensure it is successful. Therefore, this kind of program is also terrific for job creation here in Canada.
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Thank you kindly, Mr. Chair.
My name is Denis Leclerc, and I am the president and CEO of Écotech Québec, a cleantech cluster in Quebec. Unfortunately, ours is the only such company in Canada. I say "unfortunately" because it would be great to have other Écotechs in provinces across the country.
Our goal is to help the environment and businesses by accelerating the development of clean technologies, facilitating technology financing and, above all, commercializing these innovations.
In Quebec, Écotech Québec brings together more than 500 innovative and exporting companies and SMEs. According to the Institut de la statistique du Québec, they accounted for $10.7 billion in total revenues and 30,000 jobs in 2011. Some 70% of these businesses are already exporting products outside Canada. As far as the ecosystem is concerned, Quebec is home to 200 research centres and clusters that are directly involved in environmental or energy-related innovation.
Clean technologies do two things. First, they allow companies to be more competitive while reducing costs, and second, they reduce waste production, particularly in processing plants. Of course, they also benefit the environment, enabling companies to reduce their eco-footprint.
We are here today to discuss international trade. And one of the problems cleantech companies face is that commercializing an innovation is significantly more expensive than developing it. How can we help Canadian companies export their know-how and technology?
Currently, the government offers an R and D tax credit. We suggest expanding that tax credit to include commercialization, which would go a long way towards speeding up the process of marketing clean technologies abroad.
Guy Drouin, our taxation committee president, will tell you more about this proposal.
I am also the president and CEO of Biothermica carbone. We've been around for 27 years. We export technology. We are an integrated developer. We just completed a major carbon transaction in the California market thanks to a facility entirely paid for by us to reduce the quantity of methane emitted by an underground coal mine in Alabama. These carbon credits are recognized by both California and Quebec, since the two share a market.
Why have a commercialization tax credit? As the president of a tech company, as well as the president of Écotech Québec's taxation committee, I'm the right person to explain that.
We have long-term R and D tax measures, lasting measures. Canada's SR&ED program was put in place 30 years ago, in 1985, paving the way for a number of innovative high-tech companies in Canada.
The measure hasn't been rounded out, however. As far as developing a technology is concerned, Canadians are very inventive. There's no question that we are a population of inventors when you compare us with other countries around the world. The real challenge isn't coming up with a technology but, instead, marketing it to the world. For a tech company, Canada's market is small, and Quebec's even smaller.
So longevity is key. Numerous government programs exist to help with tech missions abroad. These are one-shot deals, however. Commercialization doesn't work that way. In order to market your technology successfully, you have to make a sustained long-term effort.
That calls for a sustainable measure, and we're proposing a very simple one. Under our proposal, a company would have to meet three requirements: have received the federal R and D tax credit, have intellectual property covered by a patent or other form of protection, and have a structured commercialization plan, similar to an R and D program. The company itself would need to have a credible commercialization program, one that it had developed or that had been designed by an external consultant or expert. A company that met those three conditions would then qualify for the commercialization tax credit we are proposing.
Which expenses would be eligible? Only the salary paid to the individual within the company responsible for commercializing the technology. Few people in Quebec have that expertise, so they are very expensive, earning between $150,000 and $200,000 a year. Usually, they are engineers with MBAs or international trade experience. SMEs should benefit from the same rate they have access to under the R and D tax credit. At the provincial level, it's 30% and about the same at the federal level. Such a measure would enable companies to make genuine long-term investments in commercialization in target markets, further to a sustainable marketing strategy, instead of accessing ad hoc measures that don't work.
We examined what amendments would need to be made to the federal legislation and how businesses would qualify for the tax credit. We hired Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu to that end, and the work was done. We have a comprehensive document produced by Écotech Québec.
Together with the Institut de recherche économique du Québec, we also evaluated what the fiscal cost of such a measure, applicable solely to SMEs, would be for Quebec. Under federal legislation, a SME is defined as having less than $50 million in investments. The Bombardier's and Bell Canada's don't need a commercialization tax credit, but SMEs do. On the second-last slide, you'll find the fiscal cost associated with the measure, as well as the increase in revenues that the measure will generate as a result of additional sales. The net fiscal cost for Quebec cleantech SMEs is $7.5 million annually. The gross fiscal cost is $17.8 million, and the fiscal and para-fiscal revenues total $10.3 million.
At the federal level, those figures would be four times more, representing $30 million to $40 million a year. Rest assured that this will truly secure the growth of cleantech SMEs.
This is an important element of Canada's economic growth going forward, given the interest many companies have in clean technology.
In conclusion, I would just like to point out that this measure is cross-cutting. A clean technology can be developed by a company like mine or one that manufactures recycled furniture. It's a matter of how you define it. We had that same discussion with the Institut de la statistique du Québec. It's important to clarify the area to which the fiscal measure applies.
I would like to thank all of the witnesses for your testimony. I think it's very inspiring for all of us to hear from people who are working so hard to start businesses and employ people.
I also want to comment that it was great for me to hear all of this testimony about the hard work of Canadian diplomats and how they're helping you. We sometimes malign people who work for the Government of Canada as bureaucrats, but we hear from your stories that they're really helping our economy grow.
I want to start with Mr. Hall.
Your story about having to sell out to expand, I think is an all-too-frequent and sad story of what happens to Canadian businesses. We're really smart. We're entrepreneurial. We're hard-working. However, we seem to get to this point in our businesses where as soon as they're really succeeding, we have to sell out.
I'd be interested in your view—and from other witnesses—on what we need to do to create conditions for companies like yours so that you can grow to be the giants and the world-beaters who are acquiring rather than being acquired.
Thank you too, lady and gentlemen, for being here and sharing your stories.
The committee has been hearing from a variety of small and medium-sized enterprises from coast to coast to coast. It's very interesting to hear the stories. I'm a former small business owner myself, an operator. I can see sometimes, especially the start-ups.... Mr. Hall, you might have thought there was more month than money sometimes.
There's that saying that first your three or four sources of funding are your family, friends, and fools. Once you get after that, you start to second-guess yourself. But I applaud each one of you for your entrepreneurial innovative drive.
Mr. Hall, I was reading online the story about how you acquired this company. It's an idea that you've taken now to the mining industry. Did you attend the PDAC conference in Toronto earlier this year, or any trade shows?
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We are currently looking for foreign distributors. I have met with a number of trade commissioners, and I am working with them to establish the profiles of the distributors we are looking for. We have been working on that together since the beginning of the year. We have meetings and discussions on the topic fairly often.
My second challenge is the financing of that part. We have been funded by Fonds Bio-Innovation, which receives its money mainly from Quebec's Fonds de solidarité FTQ. The problem is similar to what was just discussed. In 2012, I went to the United States to obtain funding with the help of the Trade Commissioner Service. They helped me participate in a competition, which I won. I had an opportunity to make a presentation to some 325 U.S. investors. That fostered interest in investing in Emovi Inc.
I was facing two challenges. First, for a U.S. investor, venture capital must come from my province, Quebec, or at least from somewhere in Canada. But very little venture capital is available in Canada or Quebec.
Second, there were test beds or technology showcases in Quebec. We also had some sales in France and Australia, but the test bed had to be in the United States. They encouraged us to set up free systems in the United States. That is very expensive for us. It's a vicious cycle. We need money to do that.
The funding was being discussed and could have come to pass, but not a lot of money is available in Quebec. Two funds were interested. There was a disagreement in the—
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In Quebec, we have the benefit of a cluster that helps bring together the entire ecosystem—entrepreneurs, researchers and financiers. That gives an extra boost to the development and commercialization of clean technologies.
Last week, we were in Quebec City for a round table on the green economy. We met a number of stakeholders from western Canada and the Maritimes. At one of the workshops, we concluded by wondering why each province did not have an entity in charge of accelerating technology development and creation. We also concluded that the sector should become a strategic part of the Canadian economy. That is why the Écotech Québec model will be studied in other provinces.
However, other countries have clusters similar to Écotech Québec. Of course, Scandinavian countries are much more advanced than us when it comes to development and commercialization. You should focus specifically on Finland, which has decided to make the clean technology market a strategic sector. It has implemented a number of measures to enable not only development, but also commercialization.
Denmark also has a cluster similar to Écotech Québec in Copenhagen. It is much larger than what we have in Quebec and its results are much more significant. Just to be clear, our results are in line with our means.
We, at Écotech Québec, would eventually like to see clusters like ours in other provinces. Unfortunately, it is currently easier for our companies to do business with clusters outside Canada than with groups in other provinces. It is more difficult to do business in Canada. We think that's absurd.
How can we accelerate that partnership for sharing technologies and needs within Canada? I think that's a challenge we should come to grips with.
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Something else is very important for clean technology development.
We have seen that some European countries have quickly developed clean technologies, especially France and Finland. They set a price on carbon. They have a carbon market.
Quebec just created a carbon market in cooperation with California. I will actually be in Los Angeles tomorrow to attend a major carbon expo. The Governor of California, Mr. Brown, will be there, as will the Quebec and Ontario environment ministers. Ontario actually just joined Quebec in carbon trading.
Setting a price on carbon helps so many green technologies become profitable. That helps create what we call “the 21st century economy”, the new economy. A green economy is more productive. The idea is to produce more with less. It has less of an impact on the environment so it benefits everyone. It also improves our economic system's effectiveness and our current production. At the same time, it protects the planet and makes sustainable development possible.
Finally, by setting a price on carbon, Quebec makes it possible for companies like Biothermica to sell $1 million worth of carbon credits. We announced that in La Presse two weeks ago. It's all thanks to a new technology Biothermica invented. The technology was applied at a coal mine in Alabama to reduce methane emissions. That reduction had a price on the California market. We sold the application for $1 million. That helped me recoup my investment. The $1 million ended up in Biothermica's bank account and was used to pay for wages and for R and D in order to continue improving the company. Of course, it was also used to pay taxes, which is very important.
Voices: Oh, oh!
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The market that includes Quebec, California and Ontario as well as the State of Washington, which is getting ready to join in, is extremely dynamic. It works, and takes advantage of certain mistakes that were made in the context of the Kyoto Protocol. For this market to continue to develop, it is important and even essential that the negotiations that are to take place in Paris in December 2015 be successful. Who has the responsibility of negotiating a climate treaty? Not the provinces, but the Canadian government.
It is important that the Canadian government and the provinces already in the carbon market sit down as soon as possible at the same table and define a common, strong and logical position so as to succeed in the climate treaty to be negotiated in December 2015, which is an extremely important undertaking,.
We cannot wait till November or two weeks before; work has to begin today. We must not fail in Paris. The last time there was a conference when all of the parties were together was the one in Copenhagen. They did not succeed in extending the Kyoto Protocol, and it took six years to again mobilize the international community under the leadership of Mr. Hollande, the President of France. We must not fail this time, because if there is no very clear treaty, private capital will not be there.
We should not forget that following the ratification of the Kyoto Protocol in February 2005, businesses launched 8,000 clean development mechanism investment projects in developing countries. I made such an investment myself in Salvador. It was the only Canadian project registered under the clean development mechanism of the Kyoto Protocol. These 8,000 projects led to private investments of $152 billion. So there was a mobilization.
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You are talking about missed business opportunities.
In Quebec, where we are established, certain Hydro-Quebec calls for tender encouraged projects in wind energy and biogas. We own a power plant fuelled with biogas in the Miron quarry in Montreal. It is one of the biggest in Canada, thanks to a Hydro-Quebec call for tenders in 1993. The purpose was to choose renewable energy projects that could complement hydroelectricity. This power plant allowed us to export technology.
However, there were a lot of missed business opportunities when the Kyoto Protocol failed. We had a technological showcase in Salvador that worked very well. We were selling our carbon credits to Luxembourg. There was also the power plant. We had developed a large number of projects in other countries, in South America and China particularly. The Kyoto Protocol-related drop in the carbon market clearly made us miss business opportunities, and that is why we are placing so much hope in the possible Paris treaty.
That said, thanks to the Hydro-Quebec call for tenders program and the carbon market, Quebec has become a leader. It is the first Canadian province to have adopted a policy aimed at pricing carbon. Ontario has followed suit. That is really interesting and not only for us. A lot of companies in Quebec will also take advantage of that possibility.
I can also tell you that Quebec is going to adopt the Coal Mine Methane Project Protocol Development, sometime before summer, and this will allow us to develop projects similar to the ones we have, be it in Alabama, British Columbia, Alberta or Nova Scotia, where there are coal mines. In addition, the credits generated in the other provinces of Canada will be eligible on the Quebec carbon market, which is on the order of $14 or $15 a tonne. That is extremely positive.
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On the contrary, it is never too late.
Canada has a very good reputation when it comes to clean technology, starting with water. Internationally, Canada has a very good reputation regarding the quality of its clean water technologies, waste processing, and confining waste. Certain businesses in Quebec, such as the Solmax company, are experts in making geomembranes and liners. I know the president very well, and he has just opened a plant in Singapore in order to have access to the Southeast Asia market and China. He is opening another one in Chile. We have a very good reputation.
Canada is very well-regarded technologically speaking. However, it is important to put in place the tools we set out for you, to allow our clean technology business and the industry to accelerate its development.
You should read the report by Ms. Céline Bak, the CEO of Analytica Advisors Inc.; every year they publish a report that shows the evolution of the industry and of Canadian clean technologies. This is the highest growth sector. It is a very vibrant SME sector. Of course, this sector is going to continue to grow with environmental regulations and carbon pricing. We have everything we need in Canada, and as Mr. Leclerc was saying, we have to make it to the podium and win the gold medal in this area, I am convinced of that.