I think that's a great step forward, and it shows the dedication that this Prime Minister and this government have to the environment.
I want to clear up some ignorance. By this I mean the lack of understanding and lack of knowledge of this member and many of the other members of the House in relation to many things I have heard from Mr. Holland and Mr. Cullen and other members from many parties.
The first is that it's not tar sands; it's oil sands. The reason it's oil sands is because it's oil that's coming from them, not tar.
Fort McMurray is a city. The municipality is the largest in North America, and it encompasses something in the range of 120,000 square kilometres.
In 1965, the plant site of Suncor, and I'm going to use that as an example, was started, and it employed very few people. It was in the hundreds, as there were only about 1,800 people in the community at that time. It continued to struggle for some period of time, until 1987. We heard from Dee Parkinson-Marcoux, who was the president and CEO of Suncor at that time, who gave evidence that they almost closed down Suncor because of lack of profitability over the last 20 years.
If you look at the profits of this particular corporation and the only other corporation that has been going for some period of time, you will find that over the average life expectancy of that particular corporation, the profits have not been good. They are good now because of the price of oil, but they have not been good. On an average basis, on a year-to-year basis, over the lifespan of the corporation, it has not been a success story. Now, yes, it is, but it has not been.
I would suggest that they expect some kind of return on investment. And why do I say that? I had to laugh when there were conversations by members about not being able to start small oil sands projects in the future. There is no such thing as a small oil sands project, because it takes upwards of $3 billion—yes, that's right, $3 billion—to even consider starting an oil sands project of any magnitude, of any size, whether it be SAGD development or raw mining.
To get back to the capital cost allowance and the Liberal bill of 1996, I think, where they put it in at that particular time.... I'd also like to talk about what corporations require. They require certainty. Certainty is important to being able to look forward over a long period of time, or at least five to 10 to 12 years, to see what their investors are going to get back and to plan appropriately.
I would like to bring to everyone's attention that Suncor Energy was named as one of 10 “green giants” in business. It was named by Fortune magazine in its global list of 10 corporations because it goes beyond what is required to operate in an environmentally sustainable way. They just received this award about two weeks ago. In the world, it is one of the top 10, globally, environmental corporations. That was by Fortune magazine.
There is going to be $100 billion worth of development by 2020 in that area, but as well, for every one job created in that area, which will be somewhere in the neighbourhood of 100,000, there are 600,000 jobs created in the rest of this country—600,000 jobs for every one job in that area. And yes, we do have a problem with infrastructure, and I've brought it up in the House since I was an opposition member. We have a huge problem with infrastructure, but what we don't want to do is create what the Liberals did with the national energy program back in the eighties, when I saw every single business in my community fold and die. It is not a good thing to see a community die, and I don't want to see it happen again.
I'm interested in certainty and I'm interested in relevancy. This is not relevant to this particular section.
Mr. Chair, I would bring to your attention page 711 in Marleau and Montpetit. I've quoted it several times. I'm going to try not to do it one more time, but this is an “amendment which either increases the amount of an appropriation, or extends its objects, purposes, conditions and qualifications”, and as such it is inadmissible.
I would refer you further to a decision by Speaker Fraser, when he spoke specifically in relation to this, on page 93 in the Journals of the House of Commons of Canada, February 5, 1973. “(T)he citation refers not only to the amount of a charge but also to its objects, purposes, conditions and qualifications”, and as such it's inadmissible, Mr. Chair, and it should not be considered and cannot be considered as an appropriate place to bring forward this particular amendment.