Thank you, Mr. Chair and members.
Part 4, division 18 would establish the Canada infrastructure bank, announced first in the 2016 fall economic statement as well as in budget 2017. For reference, the proposed amendments are clauses 403 to 406, and can be found on pages 236 to 248 of the bill.
Please allow me to briefly provide some background and context around the proposed bank, and walk through the contents of the proposed legislation at a high level. Finally, I'm happy to get into questions and answers.
The Canada infrastructure bank is intended to provide innovative financing for new infrastructure projects and help more projects get built, including those transformative projects that would not have otherwise been built in Canada, by attracting private and institutional investment. The proposed bank is part of the government's overall $186-billion investment in the Canada infrastructure plan.
Federal support for infrastructure will continue to be delivered largely through the traditional infrastructure models, and the bank represents less than 10% of the total planned fiscal amount. The bank would be only one new tool that government partners, particularly municipal, provincial, territorial, and indigenous, could choose as an option to build more infrastructure projects.
The bank is a new partnership model to transform the way infrastructure is planned, funded, and delivered in Canada. Leveraging the expertise and capital of the private sector, the Canada infrastructure bank would allow public dollars to go further and to be used more strategically, with a focus on large, transformative projects such as regional transit plans, transportation networks, electricity grids, and interconnections.
The proposed Canada infrastructure bank act can be grouped into six main areas: incorporation, mandate, functions and powers, governance, funding, and accountability. I will address these in turn very quickly, Mr. Chair.
First, it would incorporate the bank as a crown corporation, effective on royal assent.
Second, the legislation would set the mandate and purpose of the bank, which would be to make investments in revenue-generating infrastructure projects that are in the public interest and seek to attract private sector and institutional investment to those types of projects.
Third, the proposed legislation describes the functions and powers of the bank to help it achieve its purpose. The bank would be able to make investments through a wide variety of financial tools, including debt and equity investments. The bank would make its investments directly in the infrastructure project, and its investments would be alongside private sector and institutional investors, as well as alongside other government investors. This would be a co-investment or a co-lending model in the project. Projects supported by the bank would be structured using conventional and robust legal agreements among partners, designed to protect the interests of Canadians. The bank also may make loan guarantees on an exceptional basis, with the approval of the Minister of Finance, where separate approval is consistent with the general requirement for all crown corporations. The bank also has important functions other than making investments, including acting as a centre of expertise and advising other governments on development of revenue-generating projects, and working to build capacity with all orders of government to collect and share better data to inform future investments in infrastructure over the long term.
Fourth, the proposed legislation sets out high-level governance of the bank. These provisions strike a balance between independence and accountability. The standard crown corporation governance requirements in the Financial Administration Act generally apply. Under the proposed legislation, board members and the CEO would be appointed by the government through the Governor in Council, and the board would play a role in the selection of the CEO. On May 8, the government launched an open and transparent merit-based selection process on an anticipatory basis, to identify the bank's senior leadership. Through these processes, the government would first select a chairperson of the board, followed by the remaining directors and the chief executive officer. Any appointments would only be effective if legislation establishing the bank is passed by Parliament and receives royal assent.
The fifth aspect of the proposed legislation allows the Minister of Finance to pay up to $35 billion in cash to the bank.
It is expected that the bank's assets, liabilities, revenues, and expenses would be fully consolidated in the Government of Canada's books. We expect capital—that is, cash provided to the institution—to be transferred to the bank only as needed to execute deals and to reduce cost and overhead.
While the cash amount would be $35 billion over time, the government has announced that the bank would be authorized to fiscally expense on an accrual basis only up to $15 billion over 11 years. That would be effectively federal support.
The sixth aspect of the legislation would allow the Governor in Council to designate the location of the bank and appoint a responsible minister.
The crown corporation would also be accountable to Parliament in a number of very important ways. It would be required to submit to Parliament a summary of its annual corporate plan, as well as its annual report. It would be subject to the Privacy Act and the Access to Information Act, although only commercially sensitive third-party information would be kept confidential—about the commercial partners, not the projects themselves. This is very routine. It would be subject to the highest standard of having its books audited by both the Auditor General of Canada and a private sector auditor working together, and a review of the bank's legislation would be conducted and tabled in Parliament every five years.
In conclusion, Mr. Chair, as announced in the budget, the goal would be to have the bank operational in late 2017. This would be approximately one year after the bank was first announced in the fall economic update and tabled in Parliament. The government has been discussing the proposed bank extensively with stakeholders and in the public domain, and I, personally, have been leading much of that effort.
As part of the overall investing in Canada plan, provinces, territories, and municipalities are currently engaged in long-term planning for how they will fund, finance, and deliver infrastructure. While the bank represents less than 10% of the overall investing in Canada plan, it provides an additional option for government partners to make their public dollars go further by using a new partnership model.
Those government partners have already indicated strong early interest in using the bank as a catalyst to move their infrastructure priorities ahead and deliver more infrastructure for their communities. This supports decision-making at the local level. Many of our partners already have in place, or are considering, other alternatives and revenue-generating models that would make their dollars go further and relieve the pressure on the public balance sheets. The proposed establishment of the bank would allow all of this planning for the short, medium, and long term to continue at a good pace.
The bank could also provide early value through its data function and as a centre of expertise, which will take time to develop, to help all governments make better evidence-based infrastructure investments.
To conclude, the proposed infrastructure bank would be only one new tool that our partners could use to build more infrastructure in communities across Canada.
We would be happy to take your questions.
Thank you.