Thank you very much.
I am very pleased to be here with you today.
I'd like to begin by acknowledging that we're on Treaty No. 6 territory and the homeland of the Métis.
Last October I met with this committee in Fredericton, where we heard from farmers, fishers, and foresters about the value of research in their lives and in their communities. Today I'm very pleased to be with you in Saskatoon, a community that has leveraged higher education, research, and innovation to enhance the lives of people.
Most of you know Universities Canada. We've been active since 1911, and in every decade, Canada's universities have contributed to Canada's success. We represent 96 universities across the country.
We prepared a written submission and we're delighted to be with you today. It's great to be here in Saskatoon. The University of Saskatchewan is an outstanding example of the ways in which universities benefit all Canadians with research that saves lives, drives social innovation, and makes our communities stronger.
Universities improve quality of life by promoting prosperity, creating better opportunities, improving public transit, helping businesses to innovate, and advancing reconciliation.
I was thinking about this this morning. Whether it's the global challenges we read about in the paper of climate change, mass migration, changing trade rules, or the local issues you face when constituents come through the door of your constituency office, university research is helping. On such local issues as how you get to work, how to become more competitive or more profitable, or how to care for aging parents, the universities' research is leading the way.
I want to do a brief shout-out to the last couple of budgets.
Budget 2015 included transformative infrastructure investments that you're seeing roll out on campuses across the country, improving the learning environment for students and the research capacity of universities.
Last year's budget, budget 2016, included the CRC 150 competition, a competition for top-level talent. More than 200 world-leading scholars are trying to come to Canada. There's funding available for about 35 of them. Immigration changes are making it easier for students and top talent to come to Canada, and in the innovation clusters competition that's on right now, more than 20 universities are participating in 55 proposals that are business-led, making the connection between research, innovation, and prosperity.
Within your theme of enhancing Canadian productivity, I hope you'll see that universities are central. Let's start with the students, again, people you care about as MPs. One million Canadians are pursuing their first degree at universities on campuses across Canada. The experiences they have will determine Canada's prosperity for the next 50 years, which is why universities are working to provide research-enriched learning environments, work-integrated learning opportunities, and international outbound opportunities, a chance to study abroad.
Today's students get a 21st century education to prepare for the knowledge economy by learning from top researchers on campus, and we all know that innovation enhances productivity and that fundamental research is the fuel of innovation. Fundamental research generates knowledge contributing to breakthrough discoveries that lead to new products, services, and policy solutions.
You've heard a number of examples already this morning, and I know Jamie will provide more, but just think about Saskatoon 20 years ago, before Light Source existed. Think of the business that's been attracted to it. Think of the new solutions that have been developed. Think of the advances that have been made in agriculture, in health, and other fields. Think about the international vaccine centre lab built here, by virtue of which just one project is saving over $400 million for the swine industry in North America. Jamie can provide more examples, I'm sure.
Another example of university hubs as hubs of innovation comes from the Université de Sherbrooke.
Its innovation, partnership, and entrepreneurship strategy provides the right environment for business. It promotes collaboration with industry and entrepreneurship, as well as competitiveness and productivity.
Sherbrooke's partnership with global tech companies and research centres is pushing the limits of quantum-based research. Companies, including Google and Microsoft, strategically position universities to broaden their reach on the global stage.
We heard earlier about the very real impact of artificial intelligence on the agricultural sector. It's interesting to see that this was discovery-led, investigator-led research spanning 40 years, and now it's creating new jobs and transforming our country.
Let me get to my main conclusion, which is that Universities Canada recommends the federal government endorse full implementation of the Naylor report over a multi-year period, beginning in budget 2018, with a significant increase in support for discovery research through the federal granting agencies, and an inclusion of support for the associated industries for costs of research.
The Naylor report was authored by nine eminent Canadians who spent a year and a half looking at what the needs were. They found that investigator-led research had fallen 35%, that Canada had fallen out of the top 30 in the world in terms of research intensity, and that Canada was becoming less competitive and missing out on the economic benefits that research investments could bring.
Let me close by saying that we live in a time of closing borders and closing minds. We live in a time of disruptive technology. The changes that are happening in the U.K., in Europe, and in the U.S. are having immediate impacts on the nature of the Canadian research environment.
Now is the opportunity for Canada to lead. Now is the opportunity for Canada to shine. I ask this committee for its support in making strong, clear, and bold recommendations to the Minister of Finance and your parliamentary colleagues.
Thanks very much.