Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I have with me here today my deputy minister, Suzanne Vinet; George Da Pont, president of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency; Paul Mayers, associate vice-president of programs with the CFIA; and Greg Meredith, assistant deputy minister of strategic policy with the Department of Agriculture.
It's always good to be back at this table. I'd like to thank you for your continued hard work for the agricultural sector and the processing sector, and in particular for your thorough and timely deliberation on Bill S-11, the Safe Food for Canadians Act, which received royal assent last Thursday, and of course your recent comprehensive reports on the modernization of the Canada Grain Act on Growing Forward 2.
As you know, we continue to keep a busy agenda heading into the new year as we work to grow this core economic sector that drives jobs and growth in Canada.
Agriculture always has its challenges, but looking towards 2013 we are seeing some very positive indicators across the sectors.
While pork producers are coming off a difficult period, commodity prices overall are strong and are expected to remain well above historic levels for the next decade.
Exports are over 6% ahead of the pace from last year alone. That includes wheat exports, which are also up, as western grain farmers enjoy the freedom to market their wheat and barley in the best way that will drive their businesses forward. This also still includes the option of pooling their crop with the CWB, which is moving through the first year of its transition into the open market.
It's great to see that without the regulatory burden of the old single desk system, overall acreage in traditional wheat board grains is up, producer car usage remains strong, and farmers are moving their product in an efficient manner, as they are no longer held hostage by high demurrage and storage costs.
The Port of Thunder Bay has seen a 15% increase in wheat shipments compared to last year. The Port of Churchill has greatly diversified, attracting the business of more prairie grain companies. That is good news. Even grain elevators in Halifax say they are seeing an increase in tonnage, thanks to marketing freedom .
Suffice it to say, Mr. Chairman, that the doom and gloom scenario painted by those who opposed marketing freedom has not materialized. In fact, as I have just explained, we are seeing quite the opposite.
Another positive indicator in the farm economy is the farm balance sheet, with net worth up 5% this year over last, and a 30% increase over the past five years. Just this week we've learned that the realized net income for Canadian farmers in 2011 amounted to $5.7 billion. That's an increase of more than 50% over the year before, 2010, Mr. Chair.
Our shared challenge is to help keep this positive momentum going and to work with industry to stay ahead of emerging competition and take full advantage of growing opportunities at home and abroad.
Our government is helping to do this by continuing to drive market development with a strong trade agenda, by modernizing the legislative tools the sector needs to remain competitive, by reforming the regulatory framework to strengthen the sector's capacity to take advantage of market-based opportunities, and by shifting our focus to more transformative, proactive investments under Growing Forward 2.
Farmers continue to ask us to move beyond the status quo, and ministers certainly took that to heart with the new Growing Forward 2 agreement reached in Whitehorse early in September of this year.
By shifting the focus from reactive to more proactive investments in innovation, competitiveness, and market development, the new Growing Forward 2 agreement will give producers the tools they need to compete at home and abroad. It will also give them the tools they need to feed a growing global population that is demanding traditional and new food products as well as sustainable agricultural production practices.
Starting this coming April, Growing Forward 2 will invest more than $3 billion over the next five years, which represents an increase of 50% in cost-shared investments for strategic initiatives including innovation, competitiveness, and market development.
Governments will continue to offer generous ongoing support for a complete and effective suite of business risk management programs to ensure that farmers across Canada are protected against severe market volatility and unforeseen disasters.
Innovation continues to be a critical driver of market competitiveness, with payback of up to $46 for every dollar invested. That's why agricultural ministers from across Canada agreed to focus on industry-led research, building on our successful science clusters that are delivering collaborative solutions across a wide range of sectors. We want to ensure that we're investing in pertinent science, not just focusing on volume of research.
Our government was also pleased to announce the creation of the first of its kind Agri-Innovators' Committee. This dynamic committee is composed of successful innovators with a broad range of expertise and skills, representing most of the agricultural sectors from across Canada. I'm pleased to say it's holding its first meeting later today in Toronto. It will be an additional forum to help advise governments on what investments will generate the results and those needed and required by Canadian producers and processors to succeed in a global economy.
By focusing on research and innovation, we're making sure that taxpayers' dollars are producing real results that are most relevant to producers. A renewed focus on innovation will set us apart from the competition in world markets as well. Last year, Canada's agriculture, agrifood, and seafood exports reached a new record of more than $44 billion. Our farmers earn a major portion of their income from exports—up to 85% for some commodities, such as canola.
Of course, more exports mean more jobs for Canadians, more money for farmers, and stable, long-term growth for the Canadian economy. As a government we continue to open up new avenues for income across the entire sector by advancing free trade and investment agreements and working to overcome trade-restrictive measures and obstacles while promoting science-based approaches to trade.
Leading trade missions with industry to our key and emerging agrifood markets around the world is key. Our government has embarked on the most ambitious trade expansion plan in Canadian history. Some of the wins over the past year include restoring beef access to South Korea, for a potential market of $30 million by 2015; maintaining access for Canadian canola to China, a market worth on average $1.6 billion; and a successful WTO ruling against country-of-origin labelling in the United States that unfairly discriminated against our livestock producers.
If members would like more examples, I urge them to read the recently released annual market access report, which is up on the department's website. This government will continue to work closely with provinces, territories, and industry to open new export markets while continuing to strengthen and expand existing trade corridors.
Under Growing Forward 2, we're strengthening the Market Access Secretariat so that it can step up its efforts to increase industry engagement and advocacy for science-based international standards. Of course, we're continuing to advance free trade agreements as well. We've completed FTAs with nine countries over the past six years and we have a number of other FTAs in the hopper.
Key among these, of course, are the Canadian-European free trade agreement and the Trans-Pacific Partnership, which would open up a market to us of more than half a billion consumers and a GDP of nearly $18 trillion. A number of our key exporting sectors stand to benefit, including but not limited to the pork industry, which exports two-thirds of its production.
All the while, we continue to have a balanced trade position, which benefits all sectors, including supply management. This approach has served the overall Canadian economy well and will continue to do so into the future.
If our farmers and processors are to capture these new markets, they need a legislative framework that fosters innovation and growth in the agricultural sector while ensuring consumers' food safety is not compromised.
Our government is delivering this framework through a number of key pieces of legislation, including the Safe Food for Canadians Act, which, as I said at our last meeting, strengthens and modernizes our food safety system to make sure that it continues to provide safe food for Canadians, and amendments to the Canada Grain Act that will modernize and streamline our grain system while safeguarding quality and safety and removing excess costs to producers. There's no question that our government continues to ensure that Canada's farmers and food processors have the tools they need to drive new economic growth and compete in a growing global economy.
Of course, the new Growing Forward 2 envelope will include proactive investments in food safety. In fact, the estimates you have before you include more than $26 million for food safety under the current Growing Forward and the initiative for the control of diseases in the hog sector.
The CFIA has an approved budget of $315 million for food safety programs, and we will see additional investments from these supplementary estimates.
As you well know, Mr. Chair, through economic action plan 2012 our government is investing $51.2 million for the CFIA, the Public Health Agency of Canada, and Health Canada to strengthen Canada's food safety system overall. That's on top of $100 million over five years in Budget 2011 to modernize our food safety inspection.
Our record on food safety investment speaks for itself. Since we formed government, the overall budget of the CFIA has gone up by some 20%. We continue to make sure the CFIA has the ability, through our regulatory system, and the capacity, in terms of both budget and staffing, to protect the food of Canadian families.
In conclusion, Mr. Chair, our government will continue to build a strong agricultural industry in Canada by opening and expanding agricultural markets around the world, by giving industry the legislative tools it needs to compete in the 21st century, and by delivering proactive investments to help farmers and food processors meet consumers' demands for safe, innovative, high-quality foods.
Agriculture plays an important role in driving jobs and economic growth in Canada. With the ongoing support of our government, we remain confident that it will continue to do so.
Thank you. I look forward to your questions.