Thanks.
My name is Andy Olson. I'm the CEO of Nuu-chah-nulth Seafood. We're a commercial fishing enterprise that is owned wholly by five first nations on the west coast of Vancouver Island. We're part of the PICFI program. Our company also owns St. Jean's Cannery in Nanaimo.
I'll begin by speaking about foreign ownership and corporate control in the Pacific region.
There's a real concern with foreign ownership and corporate control in the fisheries resources of Canada. It impacts the cost of reconciliation. The risk to Canada and its citizens is significant, from the loss of opportunity and benefits for indigenous, rural and coastal communities to the impacts on the cost to re-enter and buy back licences and quota access.
The next steps to me are evident, and that's protecting Canada's fisheries resources as strategic assets. The work has already begun with Canada's rare mineral resources, and fisheries should begin immediately. This type of complete government review and process will begin to unravel the damage from the last 150 years of business as usual.
Indigenous, rural and coastal communities are the backbone of Canada's coast, and without benefits from local resources and work opportunities remaining in their areas, they can't survive. Without these coastal and rural communities, who's going to monitor the vast areas, the border and contentious food security issues? If we continue down this path, Canada will be buying back its own seafood from people who control it in corporate offices or foreign countries.
The cost of reconciliation isn't going to stop growing while resources like licences and quotas are being sold into an uncontrolled market that allows for foreign ownership, corporate concentration and investor speculation. Unfettered access to licences and quotas for sale to foreign owners wasn't allowed in the past, and until about 20 years ago, the majority of the directors of a company owning fishing licences had to have be Canadian citizens. This restriction has been dropped entirely.
Foreign investment is one thing; control of Canadian resources by a foreign and unknown organization is another, and very concerning. The recent licence and quota ownership survey was a complete failure at anything but pointing out that Canada knows nothing about who owns or controls licences in the Pacific region.
Corporate concentration, foreign ownership and investor speculation don't end with licences and quotas but now extend into the primary production and processing side. This means they control the ice, dock unloading, cold storage, processing and distribution networks. Harvesters should be partners and share the benefits, rather than taking most of the risks and much less of the rewards.
Right now, with the control of licences, the control of the shore equipment, and in some cases control of the fishing vessels, harvesters are left in the middle, with a smaller share of the revenue. The few companies left are almost all owned in part or owned wholly by large corporations or foreign investors. They work with licence and quota holders, owners and investors, and do so to add a layer of cost, with high lease rates making it harder for fishers to make a living.
In some dive fisheries, if you aren't working with select buyers, it can be difficult if not impossible to get your products hauled to market by one of the few trucking companies that carry live seafood. Last summer, I heard of fishers who couldn't get ice and fuel because they weren't working with the few companies that were buying large volumes of salmon.
When companies make harvesters beholden to them with aggressive and sometimes unfair practices, it makes it more challenging for them to survive. When large companies with vast amounts of licences and quotas don't work with indigenous, local and rural coastal communities but instead send resources to metropolitan areas or even in some cases to other countries for processing, the benefits are lost to Canada, other than to the few shareholders who benefit and can afford to invest.
Canada needs to move fisheries into a strategic asset program and protect them for future Canadians. Indigenous and non-indigenous coastal and rural communities need this work to begin immediately so that we don't lose what's left and can begin to rebuild what is gone. Programs like the Blue Economy, PICFI, NICFI, AICFI and the Ocean Supercluster should be growing the whole Canadian economy and supporting locally-owned, indigenous-owned and coastal community businesses and people.
As programs like AICFI, NICFI and PICFI are trying to support indigenous people engaging in commercial fisheries, they are forced to compete with foreign interests and investor speculation while spending Canadian taxpayers' money. As funds are committed to the budgets, the prices continue to rise, outpacing the funding and leaving indigenous groups behind. They are left to find ways to bridge the gap.
Wouldn’t it be a disaster for Canada to find out, in the not-too-distant future, that a large portion of its food and fisheries resources are owned by another nation or a foreign-controlled company? I don't think we want to see that happen.