Evidence of meeting #18 for Foreign Affairs and International Development in the 40th Parliament, 3rd Session. (The original version is on Parliament’s site, as are the minutes.) The winning word was c-300.

A recording is available from Parliament.

On the agenda

MPs speaking

Also speaking

Richard Steiner  Professor and Conservation Specialist, International Union for the Conservation of Nature, As an Individual
Steven Schnoor  As an Individual
Carlo Dade  Executive Director, Canadian Foundation for the Americas (FOCAL)

12:10 p.m.

Bloc

Johanne Deschamps Bloc Laurentides—Labelle, QC

I am going to be very quick. I am asking if the committee would agree to keep a few minutes at the end of the session to talk about the work coming up, or, at least, the agenda. We will not be here next week, and, on the 27th, we have the visit of the President of Mexico. I think we should get things clear. I have a few questions.

12:10 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Dean Allison

We're going to discuss a few things, and I've set a few minutes aside. We'll go for that, because I know the president is coming.

Mr. Dade, you've been patient. Thank you very much. We're going to turn it right back to you. You have 10 minutes for an opening statement. You've been to committees before so you know the drill. We'll start with you and then go around the room and have some conversations.

I appreciate that Mr. Dade has been to our international trade committee and is quite a great expert on what happens in South America and Latin America.

Welcome, sir. We're glad to have you here. The floor is yours.

May 13th, 2010 / 12:10 p.m.

Carlo Dade Executive Director, Canadian Foundation for the Americas (FOCAL)

Thank you very much.

It goes without saying that it is a pleasure to meet the members of this committee again. Last time, we discussed Haiti, I believe. Since then, things have moved a little.

It's indeed a pleasure to be here. I'd like to thank the committee for the invitation.

It is also a little disconcerting to be the only witness. I was told at one time that only ministers and people who are in serious trouble testify in the committee by themselves. I'm sure about not being a minister, and I trust the other part is not the case either.

Indeed, thank you. It's a pleasure to be here this morning to discuss Bill C-300.

I'd like to frame my presentation. You learn much from several of your college professors, and not always things that are germane to what's being taught. An old college professor said that where you stand on an issue is determined by where you sit, so let me frame my presentation by talking about whence our analysis comes when we look at Bill C-300.

First, there was the Canadian Foundation for the Americas. This is Canada's only independent non-university-based think tank focused on Canadian engagement in the hemisphere. As such, we sit at the intersection of academics, civil society, the private sector, and government. We have a foot in each sector, understand each sector, and are able to work with each sector. We receive views from and have exchanges with each one of these sectors.

We also exchange and have the same sorts of relations with public policy institutions, our sister institutions, throughout the hemisphere. In every country throughout the hemisphere there is an institution with which we work very closely and which is structured similarly to how FOCAL, an independent policy research organization, is structured.

We have also had in the past, specific to the subject at hand, work on trade and development and work on indigenous governance and CSR in the extractive sector. This was a project we took over from the North-South Institute, which was led by an indigenous woman from Colombia who had very strong views about mining but was able to do some very interesting things to try to bring the three sectors--government, indigenous groups, and the private sector--together to talk about issues and to try to develop new frameworks for improved discussions.

We have also done surveys of CSR practice and investments--money, time, and resources invested--by Canadian companies in social, economic, and community development projects.

That is the background on the FOCAL side.

On the other side, personally I've worked for 10 years in CSR issues in the Americas. I had a very unique position before I came to Canada and before I joined FOCAL, a position that had me in three spots. It had me on the ground in poor and marginalized communities throughout Haiti, the Dominican Republic, and elsewhere, working with these communities to implement their own social development projects, often with mining companies and with private sector companies, and with banks. It was not just with multinationals, but with small and medium-sized enterprises within these countries, too, so there was a full range of CSR activities.

It also had me at the policy level within the U.S. government on the development of CSR policy, both in the missions in the countries in which I worked and in Washington with other agencies of the U.S. government.

So it was a fairly unique position, I think, that allowed me to understand the broad context, from the macro level to the micro level.

Very quickly, then, based on this analysis, we look at Bill C-300 as an attempt by this committee and by this Parliament to improve the impact of Canadian mining companies on the ground in the communities in which they operate. We look at the bill, what it proposes, and what it offers.

The analysis is that the bill will not offer anything that is not already on the ground and realizable through compliance officers and existing international mechanisms such as the Equator Principles. Indeed, it seems in some ways to have weaker teeth than those of the Equator Principles or some of the other mechanisms that are currently available.

At the same time, it has the potential to have significant Canada-only costs for Canadian mining companies, and this is an important point. In my previous work on the ground, I came across a great deal of the impacts of private investment and of how companies behaved, including their positive impacts and contributions.

We have stories of damage being done. We see this with mining companies. We see this in poor communities with slash-and-burn agriculture that destroys forests and destroys land.

It's a very complex situation on the ground, but for every example we've had of a Canadian mining company doing something harmful, I'm confident that I can come up with three examples of investments that have been made in communities: improved education outcomes, improved health outcomes, and improved livelihoods in communities.

It's a complex story, and if you're going to implement policy, effective policy cannot be based on the sensational from one extreme or the other. It has to be based on a rigorous and rational view of the situation as it exists.

Unfortunately, the bill emphasizes the punitive aspects, and again, I would say, ineffectual punitive aspects. In an attempt to improve conditions on the ground, it ignores the huge opportunities and the huge investments that are there to be leveraged by increasing the good work and the good practices done by Canadian banking companies and also by extractive companies, by the full range of Canadian companies.

I will point the committee to our experience with Talisman in Sudan as an object lesson in how we can get this wrong. Again, there are several factors here. Talisman was in Sudan. There were problems. They moved to address them with a very rigorous and serious CSR program. Increased pressure from activists and activist NGOs in Canada had them leave.

The Chinese and the Indians came in and took over. The first thing they did--the first thing--before they changed the signs on the door was to trash the CSR initiatives, not understanding the importance, not seeing any benefit from this. The oil still flows out of Sudan. The investment is being controlled by the Chinese. The people in the communities are, if anything, worse off than they were before. This is a scenario that has a possibility of repeating itself throughout the hemisphere.

Canadian companies are engaged, and we see them doing positive things on the ground. Again, I will match you story for story the positive things they are doing. But at the same time, by weakening Canadian companies, by imposing costs and risk to reputations, by taking things to the ministerial level, we have the potential to do serious damage.

The damage would be justifiable if you were going to have outcomes on the ground that justified this, if you were going to do something to significantly and quantifiably improve the conditions of life in these communities. But the bill offers nothing in that regard, so there's a real danger there. I can talk about this, too, in the first-hand experience with Falconbridge in the Dominican Republic in my previous job and what we did.

So the real danger here, I think, is that we have a good model in Canada, a model that's viewed throughout the hemisphere as one to be copied and envied in terms of CSR practice. I can talk anecdotally and I can talk quantitatively about this.

But very quickly, I was in Madrid about two years ago, speaking with my counterparts at one of the major think tanks, the Real Instituto Elcano, and Fundacion Carolina. These are two of the major Latin American think tanks. They have both just recently begun work on CSR.

A decision was made by the Spanish government and the Spanish private sector that Spanish companies and the Spanish government were suffering reputational damage, and also competitive disadvantage, from their bad reputation for CSR, so they moved aggressively to address this. My counterparts at the Spanish think tanks were asking if we could share the Canadian experience, because, they said, Canada is viewed widely in the region as having good companies and has a good reputation. They asked if we could share this experience with them.

My first thought was that they had to be nuts. They have a competitive advantage over us with language, with culture, and with immigration. Our one competitive advantage vis-à-vis our Spanish competitors is really the reputation of Canadian companies. We may have been born yesterday, but we weren't born five minutes ago, and we're simply not going to hand that over. But there is room for cooperation in terms of the larger sphere of global CSR practice, and I'd be happy to talk about that.

Finally, there are options for getting this right. Several things could be done. Rather than creating another bureaucracy, another layer of reporting, another cost for the government, there are other mechanisms of which we can avail ourselves.

There's a compliance officer and a compliance office at EDC. Most of the money we're talking about coming out is coming through EDC. Why not simply look at beefing up that function? Give them something on a par with the International Finance Corporation or the Inter-American Development Bank in terms of staff and resources to investigate things more quickly.

It makes little sense to have one review at EDC, a second one at the ministerial level, and then another one at Canadian pensions.... It makes more sense to strengthen them at the point of impact, at the point of origin.

There are also possibilities for work with the Equator Principles. This puts all companies across the globe, regardless of national origin, on the same playing field.

Again, in terms of effectiveness, if I'm a mining company and I can't raise my own money, if I have to raise money from the private sector, am I worried about losing EDC money? To some degree, yes, I am. Or am I more worried about losing money from EDC, the Australian Export Finance and Insurance Corporation, and every major commercial bank from the Arab African International Bank to Banco do Brasil, Bank of America, City, CIBC, BMO, RBC, and Scotia, all the way to Wells Fargo?

That's what the Equator Principles have behind them. These are the more effective mechanisms that we need to look at, that are tested and have more resources behind them, so I would suggest that there are alternatives. I'd be happy to talk to them.

The IFC and the Prince of Wales Business Leaders Forum have put out a new road map for integrating human rights. I would suggest that in terms of time and investment this is where our money would be better spent, not in creating a new bureaucracy that won't improve conditions on the ground, but in working with effective and tried mechanisms that are truly multilateral and that will improve conditions on the ground.

I'll end it there. Thank you.

12:25 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Dean Allison

Thank you, Mr. Dade.

We'll start our first round of questions with Mr. McKay.

12:25 p.m.

Liberal

John McKay Liberal Scarborough—Guildwood, ON

Thank you, Mr. Dade, for your testimony.

Mr. Dade, you cite the Talisman example. It's a curious choice on your part. Talisman was operating in the Sudan. It had a very valuable asset. It was, however, certainly offside of any corporate social responsibility standard known by anyone, whether it is Equator Principles or the IFS or anyone else. It was arguably supporting a genocide against the Darfuri people. It was criticized heavily by people right around the world. Ultimately, they did the right thing and divested themselves of their asset.

At this point, Talisman is a bit of a poster child for corporate social responsibility. It participated in the round table reports and supported the idea of an ombudsman. And the share price is pretty solid. They have some assets that are quite valuable and the people can sleep at night. They're not subject to all of these allegations. So it's a very curious choice.

What makes me wonder about your testimony, Mr. Dade, is that apparently your position is that even if a Canadian company is outside of corporate social responsibility, abusing human rights, and arguably supporting genocide, that's okay because some other company will come in and take over the asset.

That seems to me to be your position, Mr. Dade. Is that actually your position?

12:25 p.m.

Executive Director, Canadian Foundation for the Americas (FOCAL)

Carlo Dade

Incorrectly analyzed and stated.

First off, the situation on the ground with Talisman was indeed more complicated than could be summed up in simple testimony in front of this committee, I think, in the few minutes we'll have.

But on the word “genocide” , I would argue that to put forward such a serious charge you would need serious evidence of that, and I have not. I doubt that anyone here has seen evidence of genocide.

There were indeed problems with the mine. Talisman came late to the CSR issue, but they came to the issue, and they came to the issue in the Sudan. They moved to change practices. They were learning lessons and they were moving to respond. They were setting up CSR operations and moving to do more with the community and to look more at human rights.

The company learned a painful lesson and they learned it quickly in the Sudan. That movement, that initiative and that positive sign, was snuffed out when the company left, so I would not accept--and I don't think that most of the committee would accept--the genocide sensationalization of what happened on the ground.

The point is that the company was moving to implement, and that their move to implement, their move to change, their move to adopt better CSR practice, was snuffed out. What came in its place was arguably worse than what was there before.

12:25 p.m.

Liberal

John McKay Liberal Scarborough—Guildwood, ON

Coincidentally, Mr. Dade, we do have a member on this committee who has travelled to Sudan many times and, I dare say, would probably dispute you. That's why I phrased it “arguably” genocide. You rightly say--

12:25 p.m.

An hon. member

That makes it a lot better, John.

12:25 p.m.

An hon. member

I have trouble with that--

12:25 p.m.

Liberal

John McKay Liberal Scarborough—Guildwood, ON

Thank you for that help, gentlemen.

The reason, Mr. Dade, is that you seem to take the position that as long as there is another company from some other country that's prepared to enter into this kind of activity, whatever needs to be done in order to be able to get to the asset, that's perfectly all right. Because otherwise, somebody else will do it.

12:25 p.m.

Executive Director, Canadian Foundation for the Americas (FOCAL)

Carlo Dade

No, that is not what I am saying.

Let me try this again. There's a situation where companies are investing and are using CSR practice, are trying to improve the community, are engaging with consultations, and are engaging social investments. These are the types of companies we want to support. These are the types of activities we want to encourage.

Mining has a potential to really be transformative in the development aspect of communities if it's done right--if there are investments in the community and if there are consultations with the communities. These are communities where there aren't many options to earn revenue. If it's done right, mining can be transformative.

So when doing this, we want to work with companies that are engaged in CSR, that are trying to do things. That's the point, and that's what was happening in Sudan.

12:30 p.m.

Liberal

John McKay Liberal Scarborough—Guildwood, ON

Mr. Dade, if I have an issue.... There are some folks sitting behind you who have some serious issues with Canadian mining companies. They have a problem, because if they sue or try to get redress to their grievances in their own country, that's going to be unsatisfactory because of weak governance.

If they come here, they're dismissed because of forum non conveniens: what happens somewhere else has nothing to do with us. If they ask the Canadian government to involve itself in any way, shape, or form, they have no place to go because there's no legislation to do that.

You seem to want to have it so that (a) there is no ability to obtain redress and (b) you want to rely on voluntary compliance, when the folks sitting right behind you say these companies have not taken into consideration our human rights or the damage to our environment, and have not taken into consideration all kinds of things that are the social licence for these companies to operate.

Your position seems to be that you don't want them to have any access or recourse whatsoever, even through a modest venue like Bill C-300.

12:30 p.m.

Executive Director, Canadian Foundation for the Americas (FOCAL)

Carlo Dade

Well, it's curious that you began by talking about governance issues and lack of redress in the countries in which these companies operate. We've just had quite a bit on Haiti, and the line coming from Canada--the correct one, by the way--is that Haiti must take control, that this must be Haitian led, that Haitians' sovereignty is paramount in decisions in Haiti, and that we must follow the will of the government, respect the laws of Haiti, and respect the Parliament and the decisions coming out.

Yet in the case of countries in the hemisphere that arguably have solid legal institutions, that do have elected governments, that do have institutions that respond to elected governments--though perhaps not perfect--the decision is that if we don't like what they're doing, we're just going to ignore that and we're going to tell them what's best: that we in Canada know better in terms of how to run their environment or how to run their labour practices.

There are cases, obviously, with gross human rights violations. The right to protect obviously.... But I think there is a huge difference between reaching that point and some of the charges. Again, the charges that we're hearing.... I've heard so many things coming from NGOs in these communities. Having worked in some of these communities, having been on the ground, having dealt with NGOs--funded them, worked with them--the veracity that is coming out, it's hard to tell sometimes.

We can't take unsubstantiated charges and just move from charge to finding of guilt to imposition of punishment, which is what we're doing with these unsubstantiated charges--

12:30 p.m.

Liberal

John McKay Liberal Scarborough—Guildwood, ON

[Inaudible--Editor]...certainly more than you're going to find out under your system--

12:30 p.m.

Executive Director, Canadian Foundation for the Americas (FOCAL)

Carlo Dade

With the access.... People have access under the Equator Principles and the IFC. I have colleagues working at the IFC with whom I speak regularly. I was speaking with them yesterday about the cases they are investigating, about the resources they're putting in.

To say that people do not have access is simply not supported by facts and evidence. The IFC has extensive investigations. EDC is conducting investigations. There are mechanisms and they are being used and to say so is--

12:30 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Dean Allison

Sorry, Mr. Dade--

12:30 p.m.

Executive Director, Canadian Foundation for the Americas (FOCAL)

12:30 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Dean Allison

That's all the time.

We're going to move on to Madame Deschamps, for seven minutes, please.

12:30 p.m.

Bloc

Johanne Deschamps Bloc Laurentides—Labelle, QC

I am going to yield the floor to my guest today.

12:30 p.m.

Bloc

Paule Brunelle Bloc Trois-Rivières, QC

Good morning. I just have a quick question for you. I am not familiar with the Canadian Foundation for the Americas.

Which organizations do you get your budget from? Are you funded by companies? Where does your money come from?

12:30 p.m.

Executive Director, Canadian Foundation for the Americas (FOCAL)

Carlo Dade

Like all think tanks, research centres in the Americas,

we get our funding from a variety of sources. We compete for the same sources and we are funded in the same manner as the Brookings Institution, Fedesarrollo in Colombia, and Consejo Mexicano de Asuntos Internacionales. We get money from the government.

We get quite a bit of money from the Canadian government. This being Canada, that should come as no surprise to anyone.

We get some money from the Inter-American Development Bank. We do get money from the Ford Foundation and we occasionally get bits and pieces from the private sector.

Again, this being Canada, we're not as fortunate as our American counterparts in the financing they get from the private sector. It is an independent, non-partisan policy research centre, also known as a centre d'investigation, centre de réflexion.

12:35 p.m.

Bloc

Paule Brunelle Bloc Trois-Rivières, QC

Do your investigations and your research mostly have to do with industry, or are you giving us your views on that today because we are talking about mining companies and such?

12:35 p.m.

Executive Director, Canadian Foundation for the Americas (FOCAL)

Carlo Dade

No, the investigations deal with all aspects of Canada's involvement in the Americas: trade, education, health and the companies' social responsibility. So it is the whole range of Canada's activities in the Americas, and in the United States. From time to time, we do something in the United States.

12:35 p.m.

Bloc

Paule Brunelle Bloc Trois-Rivières, QC

Is your goal to make the work of these companies better known? To promote them?

12:35 p.m.

Executive Director, Canadian Foundation for the Americas (FOCAL)

Carlo Dade

No, not at all. We work with companies as part of our research, for example, the research on CSR practices. We did an investigation into companies. We do things like that.

But it's not promotion of companies.