Thank you, Mr. Chair, and good evening to the standing committee.
We thank you for the opportunity to appear before you today. It also brings back some personal memories from some hours that I spent around these tables as well. It's a bit of a walk down memory lane.
Before I begin my statement, I'd like to make a few introductions. I am Elwin Hermanson, the chief commissioner of the Canadian Grain Commission. I have been in that position since 2008. I'm living in Winnipeg now, but I am from Beechy, Saskatchewan, and have a background in agribusiness and public service.
As you mentioned, Mr. Chair, I'm joined by Gordon Miles. He's the chief operating officer of the commission and has long-time experience in the industry. He coordinates and oversees the delivery of programs, services, and activities of our corporate services, industry services, and grain research laboratory divisions.
I'm also joined by Frédéric Seppey. Frédéric is the director general of the policy development and analysis directorate at Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada.
We are at a pivotal time in the grain sector, when public policies and regulatory structures need to keep pace with the rapid changes that we see in the marketplace. Modernization of the grain sector is an important priority for this government, and modernization began on August 1 of this year with the removal of the Canadian Wheat Board single desk monopoly for wheat and barley. Building on this, the government has proposed amendments to the Canada Grain Act as part of the Jobs and Growth Act, introduced in the House of Commons on October 18. These proposed amendments will advance the modernization of the grain sector. I will elaborate on them later in my remarks.
First, to put the amendments into context, I want to tell you briefly about the Canadian Grain Commission and what we do. Back in 1912—and that's exactly 100 years ago—the government passed the Canada Grain Act, creating the Canadian Grain Commission. This commission administers the act. Under the act, our mandate is, in the interests of producers, to work to establish and maintain standards of quality for Canadian grain, regulate grain handling in Canada, and to ensure that grain is a dependable commodity for domestic and export markets.
This mandate involves the delivery of a national grain quality assurance system, with many employees located across the country. The Canadian Grain Commission undertakes four key activities that reflect on our planned direction and the daily delivery of our programs.
These activities are, first of all, quality assurance: ensuring consistent, reliable grain quality assurance to meet the needs of the domestic and international grain markets.
Second is quantity assurance: ensuring consistent and reliable quantity assurance of Canadian grain shipments.
Third is research: researching how grain quality and safety is measured and developing new technologies and methods for assessing end-use quality.
Finally, and very importantly, there is producer protection: supporting producers' rights to ensure that they receive fair treatment within the grain handling system, and this includes producer cars and what we call “subject to grade and dockage”.
The Canada Grain Act has not been amended in any significant manner since 1971. However, we have delivered our mandate in a relevant manner through various policy and regulatory initiatives and by prioritizing our resources to try to meet emerging issues.
The grain sector has undergone fundamental change since the last amendments to the Canada Grain Act. Over the past 20 years we've seen the rise of high throughput, concrete inland elevators, the removal of transportation subsidies, altered transportation patterns and conveyance options, grain company mergers, increasing demands for grain quality and grain safety assurances, evolving end-user needs and preferences, and of course the most recent change was the end of the Canadian Wheat Board single desk monopoly. With all of this change, many of our stakeholders feel that the grain sector needs a revised Canada Grain Act to remain modern, competitive, and profitable. We confirmed this view when we engaged the stakeholders on this subject earlier this year.
I would also like to inform you that we are currently conducting a 30-day consultation on proposed changes to the Canadian Grain Commission's user fees. It began on November 1. The proposed fees would reflect the streamlined services included in these proposed amendments to the Canada Grain Act.
The consultation will help develop an increased cost-recovery structure that will maintain our role in grain quality, quantity, and safety assurance, producer protection, and the integrity of grain transactions. We propose to implement a new fee schedule for August 1, 2013. The consultation invites producers, farm groups, licensees, and industry associations to give their views on the proposed fee schedule, services, service standards, performance measures, and the potential impact on their operations.
Now, Mr. Chair, it's on to the amendments.
The amendments proposed by the government represent an important beginning to addressing stakeholder concerns. The amendments would streamline our operations and services, reduce regulatory burden, reduce sector costs by about $20 million, and improve producer protection. All of this would be accomplished while continuing to maintain Canada's strong grain quality assurance system. The Canadian Grain Commission would no longer provide inward inspection and weighing services when grain is received at terminal elevators.
Due to the consolidation of the industry, often one company owns both the prairie elevator shipping the grain and the terminal elevator at port receiving that same grain. This consolidation renders mandatory CGC inspection, our inward inspection, and weighing unnecessary. However, if a shipper—and that includes the producer car shippers or a primary grain elevator—deem that inward inspections have value, these inspections will be available from service providers authorized by the Canadian Grain Commission. In the event of a disagreement, these inspections would be subject to review by the Canadian Grain Commission. The proposed amendments would also give recourse to shippers, including producer car shippers in cases where the terminal elevator operator does not have the grain inspected or weighed when the elevator receives it.
Eliminating mandatory inward weighing and inspection by the Canadian Grain Commission requires further amendments to the act. To start, the Grain Appeal Tribunal, which makes final and binding decisions on inspections, would no longer be needed. I would like to assure you, though, that the removal of the Grain Appeal Tribunal does not mean that producers would be unable to question the grade and dockage they receive at delivery to a licensed primary elevator. Under the act, producers will continue to have the right to a service called “subject to inspector's grade and dockage”. Briefly, producers have the right to ask the CGC for a binding decision on grade and dockage in the event of a disagreement.
With the proposed amendments, weigh-overs would be redundant as terminal operators will have entered into commercial agreements with their shippers. Originally, weigh-overs were meant to ensure accurate weighing and reconciliation of stocks stored in terminal and transfer elevators. Without weigh-overs, registration and cancellation—another CGC service—would no longer be needed. All of these operations would be eliminated.
The grain industry asked us to provide and deliver services that respond to its needs and that have value. We are not changing everything we do, only those services that are not needed and that do not offer value. None of the proposed amendments change the Canadian Grain Commission's role in collecting and disseminating data. Service providers and grain companies will gather data and give it to the Canadian Grain Commission for publication on our website, just as we do today.
Keep in mind that these changes do not alter our mandatory role in inspecting offshore export shipments of grain from terminal elevators. The proposed changes do not compromise the quality and reliability of Canadian grain shipments.
Canada's grain grading system remains intact. The Canadian Grain Commission sets and maintains Canada's grain grades standards. We do this based on recommendations made by the western and eastern grain standards committees. Members of these committees represent producers, processors, and exporters. They based their recommendations on research and discussion of any proposed change.
Our grain safety program continues unchanged. The Canadian Grain Commission continues to sample, test, and monitor for grain safety risks, including the presence of toxins, heavy metals, and pesticide residues.
Finally, grain producers have let the government know that they value producer payment protection. The proposed amendments to the Canada Grain Act improve this program. Currently, licensed companies provide security to the Canadian Grain Commission. We hold this security and use it to pay producers in the event a licensed company does not pay for this grain. The proposed changes give us flexibility to move to an insurance-based system with a change to the Canadian grain regulations. With an insurance-based program, elevators and grain dealers would continue to be licensed and producers would continue to receive payment protection from the Canadian Grain Commission. However, licensed companies would reduce their risk through insurance to cover their payment obligations to producers for delivered grain.
Unlike the current program, an insurance-based program can guarantee producers up to 100% of the value of money owed. As well, costs to licensed companies would be reduced, generating savings for the grain sector. This eliminates costs that are ultimately paid by producers.
While these changes help reposition the Canadian Grain Commission for a modern grain industry, there is still more to be done to ensure that the organization can optimally serve the grain sector. We must continue to develop grain research that supports grain quality assurance.
We must continue to develop new ways to measure grain quality, evaluate grain grading factors, and identify new uses for Canadian grain. We must continue monitoring the safety of Canadian grain. Globally, standards for quality and safety are becoming increasingly stringent. We must be ready to provide assurances that our stakeholders can use to successfully access markets.
We are now in a post-single desk world. Producers and grain companies are developing new commercial relationships, and new forms of oversight may be required. We will continue to work with producers and grain companies to keep grain deliveries fair and transparent for all.
Mr. Chairman, I thank you for the opportunity to present to you and to the standing House committee members. The grain sector has entered a time of fundamental change. The proposed amendments to the Canada Grain Act will help the Canadian Grain Commission effectively deliver grain quality and safety assurance, quantity assurance, research, and producer protection now and in the future. We are committed to continuing the development of new and innovative regulations and policies to serve the interests of producers and the entire grain sector.
It's a pleasure to share this information with you, and we look forward to any questions the members may have.