That's a very interesting point. You raise something of significance and potential significant impact.
Allegations that are handled at the point of origination of a financing entity or the entity that's working directly with the project, such as the International Finance Corporation or Export Development Canada, are viewed one way on the ground in the countries. This is tied to the project. It's tied to the specifics of the engagement, of the investment, of the company's actions.
When it is advanced to the level of minister, especially in the case of Canada and a government that's viewed abroad as Canada is, the charges take on a whole new realm: that there must be something there if the government is investigating.
We spoke about weak governance in several of these countries. There's an issue. If the local government brings charges, it's always assumed that it's political, that someone's uncle is getting back at someone else's uncle or something. But that's not the view with Canada. With Canada, it's viewed as, “My God, this is good governance, this is the seat and font of good governance, so if the government is investigating, there must be something serious here, and there must be something that rises to the level to change a charge”, It does damage, especially if other countries, our competitors in the U.S. and Australia, are relying on current best practice and current mechanisms, and we suddenly put this in.
The other problem with the bill is that the IFC has 15 people on staff in their compliance unit who investigate cases. The IFC does about 450 to 500 deals a year. Of those, I don't know what percentage are extractive. But the number of projects they potentially have to investigate and move on is handled by a staff of 15 dedicated professionals. With Bill C-300, you're looking at a counsellor who would be splitting her time between looking at what is the best practice and looking at this, with one foreign service equivalent working for her.
You have the potential to have these things drag on and on and on. And the longer they do, the more damage is done. For the activist NGOs, the NGOs that spin the stories we hear, this is a godsend: charges against the minister; this company has been charged 16 times; the minister is investigating 16 charges by this company; or these charges have been going on for years.
You have better mechanisms, more efficient and more effective mechanisms to be able to have people's voices heard, to have their complaints taken seriously by organizations with the resources to address them, to respond and to deal with them effectively.
Again, it puts us in a bad situation, and it doesn't improve things on the ground.