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I'm calling the meeting of the Standing Committee on International Trade to order.
Today’s meeting is taking place in a hybrid format, pursuant to the House order of June 23, 2022. Therefore, members are attending in person in the room and remotely using the Zoom application.
I would like to make a few comments for the benefit of the witnesses and members.
Please wait until I recognize you by name before speaking. When speaking, please speak slowly and clearly. With regard to interpretation, for those on Zoom, you have the choice at the bottom of your screen of floor, English or French. For those in the room, you can use the earpiece and select the desired channel.
All comments should be addressed through the Chair. For members in the room, if you wish to speak, please raise your hand. For members on Zoom, please use the “raise hand” function. The clerk and I will manage the speaking order as best we can, and we appreciate your patience and understanding in this regard. Please also note that during the meeting it is not permitted to take pictures in the room or screenshots on Zoom.
Should any technical challenges arise, please advise me, and we will suspend for a few minutes in order to ensure that all members can participate fully.
Today we are meeting with the Minister of International Trade, Export Promotions, Small Business and Economic Development and officials.
We will have two panels. The first will be regarding the committee’s study on Canadian mining firms abroad, and the second panel will be regarding the main estimates for 2023-24.
For the first panel, pursuant to Standing Order 108(2) and the motion adopted by the committee on Wednesday, February 2, 2022, the committee is resuming its study of environmental and human rights considerations regarding Canadian mining firms abroad.
We have with us today, on the first panel, the Honourable Mary Ng, Minister of International Trade, Export Promotion, Small Business and Economic Development. From the Department of Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development, we have Rob Stewart, deputy minister, international trade, and Sara Wilshaw, chief trade commissioner. From the Department of Industry, we have Charles Vincent, assistant deputy minister, small business and marketplace services.
Welcome to you all.
We will start with opening remarks and then proceed with a round of questions.
Minister Ng, I invite you to take the floor for an opening statement of up to 10 minutes. You are doing only one opening statement for both panels, so we will give you the floor for up to 10 minutes, please.
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Thank you very much, Madam Chair.
It was my intention to be there in person but thought best to not be coughing or sneezing all over my colleagues. Here I am virtually speaking to you.
Good morning to you, the vice-chairs and all members of the committee.
Let me begin by acknowledging that I am speaking to you from the traditional and unceded territory of the Algonquin Anishinabe people. For those of us who are settlers or immigrants to Canada, it's important to remember that indigenous peoples have always been here and that we all have a role to play in reconciliation.
I want to thank the Standing Committee on International Trade for inviting me to speak to you on the important work that you do. I'm always very happy to assist you with your work and to provide today an update to you and to Canadians on the work that our government has been doing on international trade.
When I appeared before this committee five months ago, I said it was a pivotal time for our economy, for Canadians and for Canada's approach to trade. That remains true today.
As we continue to recover from the pandemic and build our economic resilience, how we trade, with whom we trade and what we trade matters more than ever. Securing, strengthening and diversifying our supply chains matter more than ever. Russia's illegal invasion of Ukraine has reminded us all that we cannot take our rules-based trading system for granted. The importance of Canada being a world leader in championing progressive, sustainable and inclusive trade matters more than ever. As Minister of International Trade, Export Promotion, Small Business and Economic Development, this is where my work is focused.
First, we need to deepen Canada's trade and investment relationships with partners around the world in order to continue to open new markets to Canadian businesses and exporters.
Second, we must support Canadian businesses to expand and grow beyond Canada, contributing to our economic growth and creating good middle-class jobs from coast to coast to coast.
I'm pleased to share that we are making progress toward our trade and investment targets. We continue to build and safeguard an open and inclusive rules-based global trading system, and we're supporting Canadian exporters and innovators so they can be successful in scaling up their operations into those international markets.
We're seeing this work through the numbers. Trade with our closest trading partner, the United States, surpassed a trillion dollars last year. As many of you, if not all of you, heard from the President just a couple of days ago, this is $2.5 billion of trade a day that goes between Canada and the United States.
Since our government signed CETA with the European Union in 2016, our trade has increased by almost 53% from pre-CETA levels, and with the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership, our trade has grown more than 10% since the inception of that agreement.
welcomed President Biden to Ottawa for a very productive two-day discussion last week. The United States and Canada have a long-standing trading relationship. The United States is our ally, and the President reaffirmed the closeness of this relationship.
We're working together towards a shared vision for a more competitive, inclusive and greener North America. Together, we'll build our economic resilience. Together, we're ensuring that trade benefits everyone, including our workers, our small and medium-sized businesses, and those who have traditionally been under-represented in our economies. Together, we're confronting the challenges of climate change.
You heard the President say that, by working together, we will build the green economy. There are enormous opportunities for Canada and the United States to work even more closely together, creating good-paying jobs on both sides of the border. Throughout history, Canada and the U.S. have taken on big challenges, and we are doing that again.
Canada and the U.S. are launching an energy transformation task force to accelerate our work together over the next year across the spectrum of the clean economy. We'll focus on promoting trade in clean goods, including green clean steel and aluminum, and we'll continue to collaborate on renewable energy, electric vehicle supply chains and the critical minerals value chains. That means good opportunities in those value chains for Canadian businesses, including small and medium-sized businesses, that will in turn create good opportunities for people to thrive and have great careers.
Semiconductors are enabling advances in clean energy, communication, computing and more. Canada has a vital role to play in the North American semiconductor ecosystem.
Because of the close partnership between Canada and the U.S., last year the U.S. announced a $250-million U.S. investment in the Defense Production Act for Canadian and U.S. companies to mine and process critical minerals for electric vehicles and stationary storage batteries. Just a couple of days ago on this visit, the United States announced an additional $50 million U.S. in the Defense Production Act to fund U.S. and Canadian companies for advanced packaging for semiconductors and printed circuit boards.
Why is this good? It's good because for Canadian companies to work alongside American companies in this important value chain in critical sectors in this green economy will mean growth for our Canadian businesses, including our small and medium-sized businesses.
With a relationship as large as the one we have with the United States, of course, we have issues that we are going to have to work on together, like softwood lumber. Now in the fifth round of the dispute, unfair U.S. duties are causing harm to the Canadian industry and the communities that rely on it, as well as to U.S. consumers. I raised directly with the President of the United States the need for a negotiated solution.
Now more than ever, it's critical that we grow our trade and strengthen our supply chains with our partners who are our friends. This is not just our CUSMA partners, but also our partners in the Indo-Pacific. The Indo-Pacific region is one of the fasting-growing regions in the world. By 2030, it's going to be home to two-thirds of the global middle class. By 2040, the region will account for more than half of the global economy. It will represent significant opportunities for years to come.
In the last year, I have visited the Indo-Pacific 13 times, most recently last month, when I brought over 170 companies to Singapore on a team Canada trade mission. While we establish new partnerships and opportunities across the Pacific, we're also strengthening our relationships on the other coast—the Atlantic. You heard me say earlier that our trading relationship with the European Union has grown by nearly 53%. This is really good for business, but the line that I would draw your attention to is the growth in trade in environmental goods and services, which have consistently seen growth. This really speaks to the importance of growing our green economy, not only with the United States but with our partners in the European Union as well.
Just two weeks ago, while I was on the other side of the Atlantic, I led a team trade mission to the United Kingdom with women in tech businesses. There, we saw women entrepreneurs in tech who are leading the way and growing their opportunities in the United Kingdom. Here, of course, we are at the negotiating table, working with the U.K. to further strengthen our trade and investment ties to that long-standing ally.
As we negotiate new agreements and modernize existing ones, Canada will lead with our values when it comes to our work around the world, and we expect companies around the world to do the same.
This will take me to Canada's mining industry, which is known for strong, sustainable and responsible mining. Canada is one of the most sought-after partners by countries around the world, including in the global south. Like many industries that recognize the shift to a more responsible, sustainable and inclusive way of doing business, it's critical to building a competitive 21st-century Canadian mining industry, and they are leading the way in adapting to these challenges.
They are working from a strong foundation. I want to give a shout-out to the Canadian Mining Association for initiatives like “Towards Sustainable Mining”, which is designed to ensure responsible and sustainable operations for Canadian mining companies around the world. Through their leadership, they have now worked with 12 other countries that will also adopt “Towards Sustainable Mining,” so that as a global community we are doing this together.
It's a commitment for these companies here in Canada that will require mine sites to report on performance indicators related to biodiversity, climate change, indigenous and community relationships, health and safety, and more. It's the first standard to require independent external verifications. It aims to modernize and adapt to address new realities, challenges and priorities like transparency and action on forced labour, and advancing equity, diversity and inclusion in the mining workforce.
Let me share a wonderful example of a company that I met most recently in Mexico: Canada's Torex Gold. It's the second-largest gold producer operating in Mexico. They have received some of the highest scores for mining standards and community engagement, and they have an almost 50% female leadership. Leading with Canadian values front and centre, it works.
Mining is also seeing an expanded interest and prioritization as businesses innovate and develop green solutions that will accelerate the transition to net zero. For these to become a reality, critical minerals are going to be key building blocks for the green and digital economy of the future.
Here in Canada, we're blessed with an abundant supply. They're essential to lowering emissions. They're key to electric vehicles and advanced batteries for security and tech manufacturing and for semiconductors. In short, they're the basic elements of everyday life.
That's why our government developed a critical minerals list and a critical minerals strategy, backed by $4 billion, for the 31 minerals considered essential for the success of Canada as a global mining leader.
Canada is not only producing these minerals, but we are setting our country up to be the global leader and to be the supplier of choice. We don't want to just produce them here. We want to build out the entire value chain here at home and grow our businesses—particularly our small and medium-sized businesses—every step of the way. It means doing the processing here in Canada, doing the refining here in Canada and, further downstream, doing the advance component manufacturing all here in Canada.
I know all of us here today are thinking about what the future looks like. For Canada, our future is one where the mining and mineral processing industries can grow and thrive in a responsible, sustainable, inclusive and environmentally friendly way. It's a future where we are united in our goals, with Canada meeting the United Nations sustainable development goals and net-zero emissions by 2050. It's a future that is healthier for generations to come, more accessible for all and keeps us even more connected.
I know that future isn't far off, especially when Canada works with the mining industry, our provincial and territorial partners, and indigenous partners in pursuit of making this reality. Be it here at home or abroad, we will continue to ensure that good jobs, fair agreements and progressive approaches that benefit Canadians and our economy will be the work that we're focused on doing.
I look forward to talking about the progress that we've made, and I'm happy to take questions, Madam Chair.
I apologize for those brief interludes of coughing and sneezing.
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Thank you so much for that question. How did you know that's probably one of my favourite questions?
The most recent women-focused trade mission I led was for women in technology. There were about 40 companies that we took to the United Kingdom. These are companies in the AI cybersecurity space. These are companies that are providing renewable energy solutions. These are technology companies providing things such as medical devices or biomedical solutions. They're real, dynamic Canadian companies, and we're very pleased to have led that mission to the United Kingdom so that they could pursue both investments and opportunities in that market.
Just a couple of months ago, I took about 175 companies to Singapore. There were many women leaders and entrepreneurs there as well. While on the ground, I had an opportunity to meet with some really terrific women entrepreneurs who are looking to expand and grow into Canada.
We've done a whole series of women-led trade missions around the world. We've gone to India, to South Korea, to Taiwan and to Japan, and all of these trade missions have one objective in mind, which is to support the growth of Canadian businesses led by women business leaders into these dynamic markets. It's very much a part of Canada's first-ever women's entrepreneurship strategy, which I lead today. That's about a $7-billion investment, and the return on that investment is $150 billion to the Canadian economy. In the latest report that I received from the women's knowledge hub, those numbers are moving.
We are closing the gap for women entrepreneurs who want to become entrepreneurs in the first instance, relative to their male counterparts, and we have seen an increase in the number of women entrepreneurs in our country. It's gone from 15.6% to just under 18%.
This is progress that is being made, but it's progress because of deliberate investments. For a minister like me, who has an economic portfolio, I certainly can't do this work of supporting women alone. The $10-a-day child care is a game-changer, because it keeps women in the workforce, and it keeps those women entrepreneurs continuing to grow their businesses. Paid parental leave is also a game-changer to enable women-led businesses to contribute to the Canadian economy and to grow the Canadian economy.
I don't want to leave $150 billion on the table. We're going to continue to work with Canadian women leaders, business owners and entrepreneurs to do this work.
Canada and U.S. have been making automobiles together for 100 years, 50 years of that through a very deliberate integration of our supply chains. A vehicle moves across our borders something like, I think, seven times before it's finally assembled.
Today, we are at a point in time where the vehicle of the future is going to be different. For certain, many vehicles of the future are going to be powered by batteries. The investments that we are seeing today demonstrate and reaffirm this important trading relationship for this very important sector that employs hundreds of thousands of Canadians, certainly here in Ontario, which both you and I represent, but indeed the echo effect of that is across the country.
If you look at critical minerals today, you see that those minerals that will be mined sustainably will come from our far north. It's going to come from our rural communities. We are investing to make sure they have processing capability here in Canada. We are investing so that the downstream manufacturing can also be here in Canada. We're doing this with the United States, because, complementary to that, are things like chips and semiconductors that go into vehicles. It's something that we're working with the United States on.
As I said earlier, we see $250 million, in the first instance, invested by the United States in U.S. dollars for Canadian and American companies through the Defense Production Act, and now another $50 million U.S. for that investment. It is both countries. Of course, in Canada here, with $250 million through the strategic innovation fund....
This is both countries investing and creating the environment for the innovation to occur and for the manufacturing investments to come in for investments in the battery ecosystem and for organizations, like Volkswagen, which for the first time is locating here in North America, in Canada.
This is really important work. Acknowledgement and leadership on how we tackle climate change are at the very core of this. We are able to invest today. The United States is investing in this. We're investing in this together, precisely because we're able to do that.