Thank you.
Good afternoon, everyone.
I am here representing Maple Leaf Foods, the largest food-processing company in Canada. We have operations across Manitoba, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Quebec, and Ontario and an exporting footprint that includes Asia, the United States and Europe.
We are truly, as a company, Canadian-born and globally grown. We are committed to and invested in the success and sustained growth of the Canadian agri-food sector and of the processing sector in particular, which we believe will be key to Canada's post-COVID-19 economic recovery. However, the question we're trying to grapple with today is how to make this happen. What will it take to make economic recovery happen?
I would like to highlight three areas that Maple Leaf Foods believes will be critical to success.
First is regulatory agility. We know that, if done correctly, regulation can have a positive impact on growth and foster a thriving competitive market that supports innovation and technological progress. However, if executed poorly, regulation stifles productivity, results in unnecessary costs for all businesses, particularly for small and medium-sized firms, and effectively reverses our competitiveness gains.
The good news is that Canada's regulatory system gives Canadians and our country's trading partners confidence that products made in Canada meet the highest health, safety, environmental and quality requirements. The bad news, however, is that our regulatory system is complex, with a multi-layered jurisdictional structure with no clear authority. Perhaps more troubling to us is that many regulations are either outdated or focused too heavily on prescribing a process than ensuring an outcome. This deters innovation and solutions that would improve health, safety, and environmental outcomes and stymies much-needed investment to our country. The ultimate results are additional cost, distrust between industry and regulators, and an overall less-than-efficient system that prevents us from living up to our true potential on both health and safety and global competitiveness.
Now, with the emergence of COVID-19, the Canadian government has shown that agility is possible in the regulatory process within the agri-food sector, and we sincerely hope the government continues to prioritize regulatory flexibility over the long term. In this regard, the recommendation out of the 2018 agri-food economic strategy table for an approach that is focused on predictability, efficiency, and effectiveness and that—equally important—considers the cumulative impact of regulation on competitiveness and net economic benefit to Canada should be further explored.
A second area that other colleagues have already mentioned today that I would like to also highlight is talent. Like any industry, ours requires an adequate workforce to keep operations going. This sector continues to identify chronic and critical labour shortages as one of the most pressing risks and a major constraint on both agricultural growth and global competitiveness. Right now, this sector is in need of 30,000 workers, 10% of our workforce. By 2025, we expect that number to more than double.
Now, this is not a new challenge. The industry has been sounding the alarm bells for several years, luckily coupled with concrete solutions that we are eager to work with all government partners on. Changes to the temporary foreign worker program and to immigration programming are needed to support immediate labour shortages. Even more immediate a need is to help address significant labour challenges that the sector is facing due to COVID-19. Even during a pandemic, Canadians need to eat.
It is because of our frontline workers that Canada's food plants continued to operate throughout the pandemic to provide us with food on our tables. Maple Leaf Foods alone has invested over $50 million to keep our workers safe to allow them to do so. It is critical that governments also reinforce that our frontline workers are critical, and the importance of their contributions to keeping our food supply safe.
We sincerely hope that the federal government will work with the provinces to ensure that food-processing plant workers are prioritized for COVID-19 vaccines immediately after critical health care workers, in all provinces and territories. This is in line with the direction provided by the national advisory committee on immunization and with what other countries around the globe, including our competitors, are doing.
As we have seen recently, there is also a serious animal care consideration to sustained labour shortages. In particular, the supply chain in the pork industry is very tightly calibrated. If there is a break in the hog supply chain, it certainly does not take long for things to get very serious on the farms. We have seen this just this week.
To solve longer-term labour problems, the recommendations of the agri-food economic strategy provide a good road map to assess future needs for all skill levels, to develop a sector-specific strategy for skills development that includes a focus on apprenticeship and skilled trades needs, and to promote the sector as a good career choice.
Before I close, I would like to touch on the topic of innovation. The global agri-food market in 2025 will be highly competitive and filled with new challenges—a growing population, climate change, and rapid advances in technology, just to name a few. Maple Leaf Foods strives for continuous evolution of our products and business strategies to meet these challenges head-on. In 2019, we became the first major food company in the world to be carbon-neutral and the only food company in Canada to set science-based emission reduction targets.
Existing federal innovation programs are not well suited to food manufacturing. Often they are premised on job creation or the development of disruptive technologies. In a small market like Canada, it is unrealistic to think that all or even most innovation will be disruptive.
Our industry will benefit from adopting technologies that already exist in other countries or industries and, in so doing, will introduce and customize innovation products and processes within our sector. Innovation will be critical to ensure the stability and growth of the sector, and more can be done to tailor the programs.
I'd like to thank you again for having me. I look forward to your questions.
Thank you very much.