Thank you, and good afternoon, committee members.
I am Elizabeth Aquin, senior vice-president of the Petroleum Services Association of Canada, or PSAC. Thank you for the opportunity to be here today to provide you with some comments. I understood that you wanted comments on the abolition of the Canadian exploration expense, so that's where my comments will be focused.
PSAC is the national trade association for the service, supply, and manufacturing sectors of the upstream petroleum industry, representing over 160 companies that employ over 30,000 workers. These are the companies that provide the innovation, technological advancement, and in-the-field experience to Canada's energy explorers and producers, helping to increase efficiency, improve safety, and protect the environment.
The oil and gas industry is a significant contributor to the Canadian GDP. According to a 2015 Canadian Energy Research Institute report, over the next 25 years Canada's oil and natural gas development is expected to contribute $7.6 trillion to Canada's GDP. However, with the collapse in commodity prices, capital investment in this sector plummeted from $81 billion in 2014 to $31 billion in 2016, and tens of thousands of workers were laid off. The situation has been exacerbated by the lack of access to tidewater and global markets for our resources. While we appreciate the approval of pipelines and other infrastructure projects such as LNG facilities, it will take years to get them built.
At this point, I will say that we do appreciate the $30-million one-time payment to the Government of Alberta, which today was translated into $235 million by way of a loan to the Orphan Well Association, so it will be repaid by industry, thereby creating thousands of jobs for workers that are much needed. Thank you for that.
The world still needs oil and gas, and Canada has one of the most robust regulatory regimes in the world, along with stringent environmental standards. We are already reducing GHG emissions per barrel of oil produced from the oil sands down to 30% of the 1990 levels. While Canada is said to be lagging in R and D, the oil and gas sector is the exception. According to the Government of Canada's Science, Technology and Innovation Council's report “State of the Nation 2014”, over the past 16 years, R and D investment in the oil and gas extraction industry has risen dramatically, increasing almost fourteenfold from 1999 to 2015. Ninety-four per cent of PSAC members report investing in R and D, with 45% planning to increase their budgets over the next two years and 22% already pursuing clean tech to reduce emissions.
If Canada is to play a meaningful role in reducing global emissions while the world still needs oil and gas, it should continue to supply those resources. If not, we will be faced with carbon leakage and the green paradox, where nations with far less concern for our environment produce the oil and gas that the world needs, and emissions will rise as a result.
Canadians need oil and gas, too. Today we import over 800,000 barrels of foreign oil. If we continue to discourage investment in this industry, we will end up importing more and contributing to greater emissions. Instead, let us continue to innovate, reduce carbon emissions, responsibly develop our vast natural resources, and not discard an industry that is vital to our country now and to those parts of the world that will benefit from our expertise, care of the environment, and energy supply to rise out of energy poverty.
We disagree that the Canadian exploration expense is a subsidy. Rather, we believe it is an important incentive in attracting capital to higher-risk exploration activity, comparable to R and D spending in other sectors, and a basic part of tax policy intended to incent investment that creates jobs and economic benefits while recognizing the risks involved. We believe that the term “fossil fuel subsidy” refers more to those countries that provide deep discounts to consumers through low prices for the purchase of fuels such as gasoline and kerosene, not to economic incentives to producers of the resource, where world markets dictate prices regardless of the cost to develop and produce the resource.
With less exploration per se versus development taking place today, abolishing the CEE sends a negative signal to investors that Canada is not supportive of this vital industry. Capital is mobile, and investors can easily choose to invest south of the border where investment is being welcomed, along with other places. This would be a loss for all Canadians, so we urge you to reconsider.
Thank you again.