Thank you.
Actually, Bogdan's going to stay here with me, because there's an infrastructure component to this.
My name is Joyce Henry. I'm the director general of the office of energy efficiency at Natural Resources Canada. I'm here to speak to you about the proposal contained in clause 131, in division 4 of part 4, which proposes to provide $1.01 billion to the Federation of Canadian Municipalities on energy efficiency improvements for houses and buildings, and to improve strategic infrastructure decisions.
The clause is made up of four subclauses. They provide authorization for payments to be made out of the consolidated revenue fund to the Federation of Canadian Municipalities' green municipal fund and the asset management fund. They further allow for the Government of Canada to enter into an agreement that establishes the terms and conditions for the use of the funding in those two instances.
The Federation of Canadian Municipalities, as I'm sure you're all aware, is a long-standing partner of the federal government in delivering programs on environmental benefits. They're the national voice of municipal governments and their membership includes more than 2,000 municipalities of all sizes, including urban, rural and northern communities from coast to coast.
The proposal itself, with respect to energy efficiency funding, is for $950 million in additional funds to the green municipal fund. There's a breakdown within that of $300 million for sustainable, affordable housing innovation, $300 million for community eco-efficiency acceleration to advance home retrofits and innovative financing mechanisms related to that, and a $350-million allotment to fund the low-carbon cities Canada initiative and to collaborate on community climate action to improve energy efficiency in large buildings.
There's also a proposal to provide $60 million in additional funding to support the infrastructure development activities of the asset management fund. The asset management fund is supported by a contribution agreement between the Minister of Infrastructure and Communities and the Federation of Canadian Municipalities. It supports municipal-level capacity building for managing assets and improving strategic infrastructure investment decisions. New investments will contribute to smart infrastructure investments in support of environmentally and financially sustainable communities.
With respect to the green municipal fund, it contributes to environmental benefits for Canadians by offering grants and loans for environmental municipal projects in five key areas: energy, water, waste, sustainable transportation and brownfields. The funding proposed through budget 2019 is meant to focus on advancing energy efficiency in the built environment.