I would say that ICIP, the investing in Canada infrastructure program, was quite significant and helped municipalities put in place infrastructure to sustain growth. Also, the current housing accelerator fund makes infrastructure investments eligible. This is something positive.
For ICIP, all projects had to be prioritized by March 31, 2023. All these projects will be on the ground between now and I think 2026 or 2027. We can see a gap coming in infrastructure funding for making sure that municipalities are able and ready to welcome growth and make the national project we are doing right now something positive.
It's essential, from our perspective, to understand that this country needs more units, as more units would have a direct impact on affordability. However, what's also required is to put in place the infrastructure that will sustain these units—the pipes required in the ground and the quality-of-life equipment, such as parks and transit, that is needed. More funding is needed on this side, because with the current state of infrastructure, just the rehabilitation required is quite important.
You mentioned the specific context of densification, which is quite interesting. Very often we're under the impression that development charges can basically cover the cost for additional units or the additional infrastructure required in the ground. That could be the case in greenfield development, but very often in the case of urban intensification, when you densify a neighbourhood there is also a need to add capacity. That's not just adding capacity on the pipe in front of the house, but expanding, for example, the water treatment plant at the end of the line. All of this basically demonstrates that needs are very important.
FCM did research a couple of months ago on the cost per unit of infrastructure to sustain any new housing built in Canada, and we arrived at a number of $107,000, which is quite significant. If you multiply it to the scale of the 3.5 million homes needed as defined by CMHC, you see the amplitude of the national project we have in front of us.