Good morning, Mr. Chair and committee members.
AIDE-TIC is a non-profit organization. Its mission for the past five years has been to develop access to information and communication technologies in rural areas. We have carried out projects with the community. These are public and private partnership projects that are associated with large Canadian telecom providers.
To date, we have provided Internet and cellular service to 19 communities in Quebec, including the Innu community of Essipit.
Today, I'm not going to stress the importance of developing our fibre optic networks so that they are closer to users and therefore would strengthen Canada's digital backbone, no more than it is necessary to recall that cellular telecommunications are now part of everyday life, improving the public's quality of life and safety.
Today, I will speak to you about the future, a near future in which digital technology will play a major role and the government will have a leading ability to respond.
The technological environment and the Internet are constantly transforming to meet growing needs. So adaptation of businesses the furthest from the markets and supply is increasingly difficult, forcing them to work harder to remain competitive.
As the OECD indicated in 2015, countries that are successful in positioning themselves on the global digital stage are those that support the deployment and development of broadband networks to remote regions, but that also integrate the dual objective of expanding mobile broadband and optimizing spectrum resources.
Canada has been successful on this front. However, the efforts to date have always favoured the deployment of fixed and satellite networks, while mobile networks necessarily play a key role in the vitality of the digital economy.
Mobile technology is complementary to and inseparable from the fixed Internet. It supports new applications, including those adapted to emergency and health services, business, self-driving transportation initiatives, document transfers and financial services.
On a global scale, the volume of Internet use is increasing by 20% per year, with mobile data traffic increasing by 600% in Canada by 2020. In 2015, 51% of the data that flowed did so over smart phones and tablets, which explains why 60% of all new applications developed are for mobile devices.
The strong demand for mobility therefore justifies the need for additional infrastructure, speed and capacity. By 2020, the technology will attain similar speeds to those of fibre optics, with targets of 1,000 megabits, 10 times faster over the next decade. So today, the rural right to accessibility to the digital economy is the focus of our concern. The need for adequacy when there is a demand for service and government programs is essential, particularly to help new organizations that must face this next revolution of Internet access platforms.
Therefore, the current challenge is to extend mobile networks, which are a source of economic vitality and a factor in accelerating innovation because they remain the only mass support technology that can simultaneously offer mobile Internet and voice transmission, so cellular telephony. The most remote businesses can no longer be excluded from these benefits. Consolidation of the rural contribution to the country's economic input, both through employment and added value must remain at the heart of our actions to encourage more dynamic occupation of the Canadian territory.
To this end, for some time now, elected officials have been expressing the need to have government programs adapted in light of the deficiencies in national cellular services. They are calling for respect for a rational and reasoned technological choice for broadband Internet that is much more progressive and adapted. In reality, even today, too many rural municipalities, including many First Nations, are still completely without cellular telephony, and that must not be the case anymore.
We have two recommendations that are consistent with the expressed will of the current government to make Canada a leader in innovation by developing a digital capacity and having it adopted by all sectors of the economy.
First, the Minister of Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada is currently establishing the criteria for the new connecting Canadians program, which will be in place for five years. This crucial program is itself the central element of the federal government's digital strategy for the next five years.
In light of the imminent announcement of the operational framework for the program and the $500-million envelope under budget 2016, AIDE-TIC would like to express its concern about the risk of looking for an obvious technological neutrality that too often in the past has had negative impacts on the deployment of cellular services in the regions. In that respect, we would suggest that you recommend to the officials involved that they create project-selection criteria that prioritize cellular technology as the essential strategic infrastructure for the transmission of mobile Internet and voice where there is no efficient Internet. Obviously, these projects will have to remain at a reasonable cost, prioritize locally, be based on local and provincial involvement and, of course, ensure that the telecommunications carriers are involved.
The second recommendation has already been submitted to the committee, but it has been adapted and regionalized. It is intended to stimulate the deployment of new cellular telecommunications infrastructure, but specifically in municipalities with fewer than 3,000 inhabitants, and along interregional roads. To that end, AIDE-TEC thinks that, considering the low user volumes and, therefore, the low profitability for carriers, as well as the premature aging of technology because of the rapid pace of development, a tax credit should be provided as an incentive for investments or a capital cost allowance of 55%. This would be done based on the total new expenditures incurred by carriers in these rural sites, as is the case for property in class 50.
To conclude, we would like to thank you for giving us a voice and for giving a voice to the half a million Canadians who, even now in 2016, have no mobile cellular service.
We are available to answer any questions the committee members may have.
Thank you.