Thank you, Mr. Chair. Merci, monsieur le président.
My name is Sandra Schwartz. I am the vice-president of policy advocacy with the Canadian Electricity Association.
Every day our member utilities generate, transmit, and distribute electricity to industrial, commercial, residential, and institutional customers across Canada. The energy we make, move, and sell is essential to our homes, our businesses, and the entire economy. We often talk about natural resources being the backbone of Canada's economy, along with manufacturing, etc., but we rarely think about the role that electricity actually plays in our economy.
Today's system has had competitive prices as one of its core features, a tremendous competitive advantage for Canadian business. This advantage is a product of the foresight of previous generations, who built the stable and reliable system that has served us so well for decades. In that sense, electricity policy in Canada has de facto been an industrial strategy for Canada. It has served business, retail customers, and the economy well for decades.
The Canadian electricity system, or the “grid”, as many of you will know it, is the largest and most complex and interconnected machine in North America. It's safe, solid, and well maintained, but it is showing its age. Like other major infrastructure that we see, and municipal governments are talking about infrastructure needs, our electricity system is in need of major transformation and in need of major investment. Our system is outdated, and it can't support our growing population or our technological growth.
Today the challenge faced by Canada's electricity sector is three-pronged: replace aging infrastructure while still meeting new demand; achieve continuous improvement and emissions reduction efforts; and incorporate digital technology to progressively replace analog equipment.
The existing infrastructure must not only be renewed, but the system itself must be transformed from one designed to support a smaller economy and smaller population base to one that supports the energy-intensive information and electronic devices that consumers demand. It also needs to support the sustainable economy of the future and the mass use of electric vehicles, among other electricity-hungry consumer innovations.
As a result of this investment deficit and the new pressures on the system, estimates from the Conference Board of Canada and the International Energy Agency conclude that Canada needs to spend a minimum of $293 billion over the next 20 years, or approximately $15 billion annually, on the infrastructure to maintain existing assets and to meet economic growth.
I have brought copies of the Conference Board report, which does go into detail about where those specific electricity infrastructure needs are in terms of generation, transmission, and distribution assets.
Consequently, investment in electricity infrastructure is an issue of significant national importance. While it is provincial jurisdiction, there is still a federal role that must be played in electricity infrastructure. Electricity investment must be thought of as a major national priority linked directly to securing Canada's economic competitiveness. Shoring up and expanding the power grid could be one of the biggest public works projects in the country's history. It means business for the manufacturing sector and jobs for Canadians.
As you know, having read our pre-budget submission, the Canadian electricity industry is not seeking federal funding to meet this infrastructure challenge. We're asking the federal government to provide a supportive legislative and regulatory environment for these investments.
The $293 billion over 20 years is, on its own, a major stimulus package and will continue to provide jobs for Canadians long after project construction is completed. In a report released just yesterday by the CIBC, entitled “Energizing Infrastructure”, economists estimate that the $293 billion investment in electricity infrastructure projects will create 320,000 jobs over 20 years.
In the last decade, infrastructure projects have faced growing legislative and regulatory complexity, characterized by lengthy and often duplicative regulatory processes. In some cases, regulatory approval and construction periods can take more than 10 years from decision to grid connection itself.
In previous years, and in submissions to this committee, the CEA has outlined how the sector is changing and evolving.
Whereas in many provinces provincial crown corporations continue to provide generation, transmission, and distribution services, they are now joined by new players. The new players can be investor-held companies that look to the federal government for tax relief.
Over the last six years, CEA has asked this committee for a number of changes to the tax system, and I will quickly remind members of a few key requests from our industry.