Thanks very much, Chair.
I wanted to use the opportunity we had this afternoon to follow up on a notice of motion that I provided to the committee with respect to Sustainable Development Technology Canada.
There were new revelations in news media today with respect to the whistle-blowers in this case who have now expressed a concern for reprisals against them.
The committee currently has this study programmed, and because of the importance of this issue and the runway that's required to get a study off the ground, I would like to move this motion today. We have a few minutes. Members have had a few days to consider it, so I would like to advance this and then we will proceed with this.
This has been circulated to all members of the committee. I will read the motion now. I move:
That, pursuant to Standing Order 108(3)(h) and in light of the new information revealed through whistleblower complaints, regarding the one-billion-dollar fund awarded by the government to Sustainable Development Technologies Canada to deliver taxpayer money to the green tech sector, the committee dedicate six meetings to this matter and hear testimony from the Minister of Innovation, Science and Industry, the Minister of the Environment, the Minister of Finance, and that the committee order the government to produce all documents related to this program, including emails, briefing notes, text messages, contracts, funding agreements, memorandums of understanding and any other document that the government has related to this program.
Chair, it is incredibly important. At a time when Canadians are facing a cost of living crisis, it looks like, as a result of conflicts of interest and gross mismanagement at this taxpayer-funded organization.... Canadians must be able to get answers about the alleged misappropriation of over 150 million taxpayer dollars.
This is incredibly important. I appreciate that this isn't a study that's going to step off on Monday morning or Wednesday afternoon of next week, but I put the motion on notice in good faith because I wanted members to have the opportunity to consider it. With the revelations today about the concerns of the whistle-blowers, the proponents behind this, the prospect of a parliamentary committee studying this should in its infancy provide some comfort that Canadians are now aware, that reprisals would, of course, be unacceptable and that the country is watching.
I think it's incredibly important for our democratic institutions that people know that, when they see something wrong happen, they can bring it forward without those fears of consequences and reprisals, and that they are not working with their hands tied behind their back because of non-disclosure agreements or threats to their safety or their livelihoods.