Thank you, Chair. Good afternoon, colleagues.
As you have heard, with me today is my deputy minister, Bob Hamilton; the CEO of Parks Canada, Alan Latourelle; and Ms. Elaine Feldman, the president of the Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency. In the back row ready for the call should we get into deep financial and accounting matters is Ms. Carol Najm, Environment Canada's chief financial officer.
Mr. Chair, I'd like to start off by expressing my sincere appreciation to the committee for the invitation to appear here today to discuss the supplementary estimates (B) tabled in the House earlier this month.
I will begin with a brief statement. After that, I would be pleased to answer any questions the members may have for me.
Since I last appeared before this committee on the main estimates, Environment Canada has continued to maintain its focus on the effective and efficient delivery of its mandate. I'm pleased to note the department is making steady progress initiating meaningful actions to protect Canada's environment, to protect Canadians, and the economy.
As a regulatory department our strength lies in our ability to successfully create, implement, monitor, and enforce effective federal regulations and legislation. On this front I am proud to say Environment Canada is a world-class regulator leading the way by integrating science into good regulatory decision-making and strengthening and deepening its monitoring networks where it matters most.
The department is continuing to engage expert scientists by using the best available research and relying on effective collaborations with its partners at home and abroad.
Environment Canada is protecting endangered species and our nation's rich biodiversity through strong leadership and effective partnerships.
Since 2006, thanks in significant part to the department's efforts, Canada's protected areas have grown by fully 53%. Almost 10% of Canada's land mass is now protected, an area greater than that of the province of British Columbia.
On climate change, the department is heavily engaged in implementing our sector-by-sector regulatory approach and in working with the provinces and territories to reduce emissions. We have combined efforts to reduce electricity emissions through a range of measures designed to shift away from high-emission sources of electricity and to reduce demand through energy efficiency.
We've already put into place light duty vehicle regulations for the model years 2011 to 2016, and we're working with the United States to extend those regulations to model years 2017 and beyond. We proposed on-road heavy duty vehicle greenhouse gas emissions regulations for the years 2014 and later. We also introduced regulations to implement new standards to reduce air pollution and greenhouse gas emissions in the marine sector. In September we announced final regulations for reducing greenhouse gas emissions from coal-fired electricity generation.
These regulations will apply stringent performance standards to new coal-fired electricity generation units and units that have reached the end of their useful life. Greenhouse gas emissions from the electricity sector are now projected to decline by a third between 2005 levels and 2020 despite significant increases in economic activity and electricity production over this period.
Collectively, colleagues, our efforts have already brought Canada about halfway to achieving our greenhouse gas reduction target by reducing emissions by 17% from 2005 levels by 2020. The department is continuing to push forward. We're now turning our focus to the oil and gas sector.
When it comes to water quality, the department tackled one of the largest single sources of water pollution by introducing this past summer the first national standards for waste water treatment. It also supported the enhancement and renewal of the Great Lakes water quality agreement with the United States to address such issues as aquatic invasive species, habitat degradation, and the effects of climate change. It launched the Great Lakes nutrient initiative to address toxic and nuisance algae.
Environment Canada is continuing its work with Ontario to develop a renewed Canada-Ontario Agreement Respecting the Great Lakes Basin Ecosystem.
Under the St. Lawrence Action Plan, Environment Canada is also focused on monitoring the St. Lawrence to improve biodiversity conservation, water quality and sustainability.
The department also progressed on its collaborative work with the provinces, with environmental non-governmental organizations, and with industry to improve air quality, when provincial and territorial ministers of the environment endorsed the air quality management system just a few weeks ago.
There is more, but in the interests of time, Mr. Chair, I'd like to turn to the supplementary estimates (B) before us today.
As you will note, Environment Canada's submission in the supplementary estimates (B) includes 12 items, a number of them further to budget 2012, which due to timing could not be included in the main estimates. I'd like to highlight them.
The major items include a proposed $17 million increase to support such initiatives as the Species at Risk Act, the Lake Winnipeg basin initiative, the Major Projects Management Office, and the health of the oceans initiative.
This amount includes $11.8 million for ongoing improvements to the species at risk program and $2.1 million to support watershed, land stewardship, and freshwater science initiatives under the renewed Lake Winnipeg basin initiative program. There's a request for $2 million to renew funding for the Major Projects Management Office to ensure timely and quality reviews of more than 70 high-profile major resource projects and to support implementation of the responsible resource development initiative. As well, there is a $1.2 million request to enable the health of the oceans partners and the Government of Canada to respond to an ongoing need to protect the health of Canada's oceans.
It also includes just under $13 million in savings that the department has identified for the budget 2012 deficit reduction action plan.
When considered together, this submission works out to a departmental request for about $5 million in additional funding.
As for Parks Canada, which also falls under my purview, supplementary estimates (B) include three transfers to and from other federal departments, which amount to a reduction of about $12,000. The agency would like to invest $3.7 million in the species at risk program and $800,000 to advance the establishment of two marine conservation areas through the health of the oceans initiative.
Mr. Chair, this highlights some of the activities these estimates will financially support in the department's work to provide Canadians with a clean, safe and sustainable environment.
I would like to thank you, Mr. Chair, members of the committee, for your time today. I would be happy to answer your questions.