Thanks very much, Wayne, and good afternoon to the committee. It is a pleasure to be here today.
It's quite a story that you expressed here, Kathy, and my thoughts are with you and your family.
I'd like to thank everybody today for this opportunity to speak to the finance committee in regard to an issue that's very important to us and the marine sectors of Atlantic Canada.
The seafood sector in Atlantic Canada in 2020 had exports of more than $4.5 billion and is responsible for supporting tens of thousands of jobs across mainly rural coastal communities. The Department of Fisheries and Oceans, DFO, has the very challenging task of managing over 1,000 harbours across this country, and I want to recognize the work they do, especially in eastern Canada, which accounts for 80% of Canada's fishing harbours. We all understand the importance of addressing this essential infrastructure.
I have had conversations directly with my fellow Atlantic ministers as of this morning to bring them up to speed. We are all in agreement—the provinces of Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island—that a new approach, a more strategic long-term approach to effectively deal with essential infrastructure needs to be put in place. We are all in agreement that the timing is right to support the federal government's approach to post-pandemic efforts to build back better and the blue economy.
I have met with the P.E.I. Fishermen's Association and the Prince Edward Island Aquaculture Alliance. They raised the urgent need their members are facing every day regarding the many harbours across Prince Edward Island and their need for repairs, which is the same story facing Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick.
While we are very pleased to see the additional investments proposed in the 2021-22 federal budget of $300 million over the next two years, we feel that this is a short-term approach and is not conducive for sound and strategic long-term investment planning and infrastructure.
An evaluation of the small craft harbours program in 2013 specifically stated, “Having to rely on substantial funding beyond the program’s base budget indicates that the program lacks sufficient funding for [lifetime and] lifecycle management.”
It was also documented in a 2019 report of the Standing Committee on Fisheries and Oceans that “the annual funding required to keep all core fishing harbours in good working condition is estimated at over $150 million annually, but the average A-base annual budget remains at approximately $75-85 million, excluding salaries and overhead”. This was according to the assistant deputy minister for fisheries and harbour management at DFO.
For the past two years, I have been proposing that there needs to be a strategic five-year investment plan in addition to the existing budget of $1 billion.
I, along with my colleagues, have heard from industry loud and clear. Users of these facilities are appreciative of the repairs and investments that are being made each year, but they have consistently identified that there is more work that needs to be done that budget allocations won't allow. Much of the marine infrastructure under the responsibility of DFO is decades old. The need for repairs and new investments is beyond the current budget allocations.
Climate change is also bringing more frequent and severe weather events to eastern Canada, which are further impacting our aging infrastructure. I point out that in some cases, with the storm surges that we're seeing, some of our wharves are actually even with the top of the water or the water is covering the top of the wharf. Frankly, much of the existing infrastructure was not originally designed to deal with the current impacts of the more severe storms associated with climate change.
What is needed is a long-term approach that will support strategic planning and engagement with all groups to identify what supports they need in the area of current and future essential infrastructure to continue growing our marine sectors. For example, the average marine economy GDP increased by 25% in eastern Canada and by 45% in P.E.I. from 2014 to 2018.
It is also widely known that over time the needs of our commercial fishers have evolved. The vessels and gear are larger and the value of investments made by fishers have increased to the point where they are not comfortable docking a vessel valued at hundreds of thousands of dollars to a condemned wharf.
Our aquaculture sector has also grown substantially, and these businesses require access from ice-out to ice-in. In some years, they have allowed the boats to stay in year-round.
They can also face challenges and issues of access and space limitations, not to mention access to safe navigation. We do not need to look further than Malpeque harbour, which the chair is very familiar with, for an example that has been well studied for over two decades, and to see how, despite everyone's best efforts, more needs to be done. We can see how climate change is affecting that one harbour.
As we see light at the end of this pandemic, our marine sectors are positioned well to contribute their part in having our economies succeed. Canada has a well-renowned reputation for producing some of the highest-quality seafood protein; however, we cannot grow our exports if we do not have the strategic investments into the essential marine infrastructure that supports our seafood production.
Increased long-term investments into marine infrastructure will support the seafood sectors, which are in alignment with the federal government's discussions around the blue economy strategy. They will position Canada to build on its international reputation of being a net exporter of quality food products. This will also support the marine sectors, which are in alignment with the federal government's commitment to build back better as we move to the recovery phase of this pandemic. We will support job creation and investment in the marine construction and repair sector. We will mitigate and strategically plan for the impacts of climate change, which are resulting in more severe and frequent weather events. We will also ensure more effective, efficient and productive long-term planning and procurement and, last and ultimately, support small rural coastal communities and the small businesses that rise around these communities.
While the proposed increase in the budget of 2021 of $300 million over the next two years is recognized as a good start, I would like to put forward to the federal government that it has an opportunity with the Department of Fisheries and Oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard to demonstrate its support for the Canadian marine sectors by developing a strategic long-term marine infrastructure investment plan, such as our supporting marine infrastructure plan, which was provided to DFO with the endorsement of all the Atlantic ministers of fisheries and aquaculture.
I would like to thank the House of Commons Standing Committee on Finance for this opportunity to speak today. This is a very important issue to Prince Edward Island and Atlantic Canada.
Thank you very much.