Thank you very much, Chair—Peter—and thank you to everyone who is here working so hard.
I also really want to thank Arun Thangaraj, the deputy minister of transport, and Stephanie Hébert, assistant deputy minister of transport. Thank you for all your hard work and for being here with me today.
I also want to join you, Mr. Chair, in recognizing that this is a time when wildfires are raging in many parts of our country. I know that it touches some of the MPs here very close to home. It's a good opportunity to thank all the first responders and to let Canadians know that on this issue, certainly, we're all in it together to support them.
As we all know, BC Ferries is an independent, privately operated organization regulated by the Province of B.C. This is not an entity under the authority of Transport Canada. I share the committee's disappointment with this procurement.
This decision comes at a time when the Government of Canada is making record investments in rebuilding Canada's marine sector. The National Shipbuilding Strategy has created and maintains over 20,000 jobs annually, while contributing over $2.3 billion a year to the GDP, supplying critical resources to the Royal Canadian Navy and the Canadian Coast Guard, and strengthening national sovereignty and economic resilience.
In line with a 1977 agreement, Transport Canada does provide funds, strictly for operations, to the Province of B.C. This includes nearly $38 million in federal support that will go to the province in the fiscal year 2025-26. The province uses that funding to provide operating support for ferry services.
I am troubled by the procurement. I strongly believe in supporting Canada's shipbuilding capacity, supporting middle-class jobs and supporting our economy. We all recognize that this is a critical moment, particularly to support our steel and aluminum sectors, given the tariffs that Canada is facing.
I've asked every organization under Transport Canada's authority, including ports, airports and marine services, to give preference to Canadian products whenever possible when they make major purchases, and that includes Canadian steel and aluminum. When Canadian options are unavailable, our next preference is to buy from countries that have signed reciprocal procurement-related trade agreements with Canada, to make sure that our investments support fair and open trade practices. Last June, I sent out 71 letters containing that instruction.
In line with the need now to support the Canadian economy, I have directed all organizations under the Transport Canada umbrella, including ports, airports and marine services, to prioritize Canadian content in their major procurements, particularly Canadian steel, aluminum and lumber wherever feasible. When Canadian options are not available, our next preference is to buy from countries with whom we have reciprocal procurement agreements in our trade deals, ensuring that our investments support fair, open and rules-based trade. In June I sent out 71 letters with this instruction.
I have been an advocate of reciprocal procurement for Canada for some time. I first put forward the idea as finance minister in the 2021 budget, and I advanced it further in the 2023 budget and 2023 fall economic statement. In fact, in 2023 the Department of Finance published a policy statement outlining a plan to go forward with reciprocal procurement. This June the federal government put in place a reciprocal procurement policy.
I'm also glad to announce today that Transport Canada will be convening a meeting with the provinces and territories as well as ferry owners, operators, shipyards, labour representatives and the steel and aluminum industry. I spoke this morning about the meeting with the CEO of Seaspan. This meeting will be a chance for us to work together—the federal government, the provinces, shipbuilders, labour, and steel and aluminum—to talk about how we can buy Canadian. I will be convening a similar meeting, including the steel sector, for the rail industry and all rail operators.
Right now I'm convening a meeting with the provinces and territories, along with ferry owners and operators, shipyards, representatives of labour and members of the steel, aluminum and softwood lumber industries. This meeting will allow us to work together on addressing Canada's ferry procurement challenges. I plan to hold a similar meeting with the rail industry as well.
I want to thank the deputy minister of transport for working hard with me to organize these meetings.
The response we've received from our provincial and territorial counterparts and from industry has been very positive. I think there's a lot of goodwill to do that.
Let me conclude by saying that I'm grateful for the work of the committee. I hope we can spend some time looking ahead to ways that we can support Canadian shipbuilders and Canadian steel and aluminum producers. That's something that I am certainly focused on.
I look forward to answering your questions.