We're looking forward to supporting our Canadian teams.
We're on the subject of the motion that Mr. Perkins has brought forward yet again to this committee. It is a motion that is almost identical to the motion that was brought previously to this committee, which was voted down by this committee. It's also a motion that is before the INDU committee.
We're here basically taking time away, as I see it, from important studies that we should be discussing here today, whether it is red tape reduction, which is absolutely critical to support our small businesses and Canadians, or whether it's diversity and procurement. Unfortunately, here we are discussing a motion that is recycled and almost identical to the motion that was brought before us and voted down just a few days ago.
But here we are.
I see this as a distraction from the very fact that this Liberal government has brought to Canada over $50 billion in auto investments in just the last four years. That is an astounding amount of investment in job creation in communities like mine in Windsor, in communities like St. Thomas, in communities across Quebec and B.C., and really right across the country. It's incredible when you combine it with the fact that we're not only seeing tremendous investment in the auto sector, but also seeing the completion of the Trans Mountain pipeline as well, which is a major Canada-building infrastructure project that's going to have a big impact.
Again, when you compare that track record of job creation and investment, it's tremendous, with $50 billion in auto, tens of thousands of jobs being created in automotive and manufacturing, and tens of thousands of spin-off jobs in manufacturing and the Trans Mountain pipeline as well. When you compare that to the Conservative track record eight years ago, where the Conservative government at the time lost 300,000 manufacturing jobs across Canada and was unable to complete a single major infrastructure project, the difference between today and yesterday is black and white. It's incredibly stark.
What we're seeing here today is a motion brought before this committee with the purpose of doing nothing but trying to distract from the good news of the $50 billion in auto investment across Canada. I'm talking about the Stellantis battery plant in Windsor. There are 2,000 folks building the battery plant in Windsor right now. When you take a drive down E.C. Row, hang a right on Banwell Road and head towards the tracks, you drive by literally hundreds upon the hundreds of pickup trucks and cars, with Ontario licence plates, of workers who are building that battery plant as we speak.
These are local workers. These are Canadian workers. These are unionized workers. These are workers who are part of the CBTU, the ironworkers, the millwrights and the painters—you name it. They're local workers and they're building that battery plant.
When the battery plant is done, you're going to have an additional two and a half thousand permanent workers at that battery plant who are going to be building batteries for generations to come. Those two and a half thousand permanent workers will be local, they will be Canadian and they will quite likely be unionized.
This is a tremendous story that the Conservatives are desperate to try to distract from.
Then, up the road—if you travel literally an hour and a half up the 401 to St. Thomas—you see another Volkswagen...another generational battery plant being built. You're going to have 2,000 local, Canadian workers building that battery plant in St. Thomas. You're going to have 3,000-plus permanent, local, Canadian workers building batteries in St. Thomas.
At Northvolt in Quebec, you're going to have over 1,000 people building the battery plant there. You're going to have over 3,000 permanent jobs there, building batteries for generations to come.
Of course there's the Honda investment, which is the single largest investment in the history of this country. It's the largest investment in automotive and the largest battery investment in North America.
That's, again, 4,500 jobs supported permanently, with thousands of jobs for building those four factories that will be built across Ontario and across Canada. That's incredible—and that's saying nothing about the Michelin investment or Rio Tinto.
What you're seeing right now is that the world is coming to Canada to build. The world is making huge investments and bets on Canada to build batteries and the electric vehicle supply chain here. It is incredible to see, and it is an incredible turnaround from what we saw eight years ago, when the Conservatives were in power. I just want to underline again that, under the Conservatives, there were 300,000 manufacturing jobs lost. In manufacturing communities like mine, there was 11.2% unemployment and close to 30% unemployment for young—