Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I want to ask for my colleagues' indulgence for about a minute or two so that we don't have the relevance conversation because, in my initial intervention, I talked about five elements. I talked about the willing partner. I talked about the transparency and the way we are being transparent. I talked about the fact that we need to keep the integrity of the process. I talked about the accountability. I talked about the fact that the hiring plan submitted to the Government of Canada during the process of incentive negotiation is available, regardless of whether what we're going to look at is redacted or unredacted.
This conversation started as, “Oh, my god, we're going to lose 1,600 jobs. All these jobs are going to be taken over by foreign workers.” I think that myth is being demystified. Now we've realized, “Oh my god, there is a hiring plan.” This hiring plan is actually talking about some labour, some experts coming in on a temporary basis to train our guys, to implement the hiring plan and to make sure the system is safe. Then they're going to move away.
Now, what is left? What is left to talk about is, “Why don't you guys want to publicize the contract? Why don't you want to have it open?” Well, that's where the sixth element comes into play. That element is responsibility. That responsibility is talking about the risk of us making full disclosure, as opposed to calling it “secrecy”.
What is the risk of us actually making this contract fully public and open without us even having had the opportunity to look at it?
I'd like to go back to the notion of reasonable doubt. Is there reasonable doubt that by making publicly available the unredacted contract there could be any risk as to the current investment, or a potential loss of the jobs that we are already counting on?
I also want you to think about whether there other investments and other negotiations ongoing that could potentially be put on pause and move Canada from the leadership position that we are in. That brings doubt to the countries and to the organizations that have cautiously made the decision to come to Canada and invest and are in the process of negotiation.
Will they think, “If somebody doesn't like it, then something shows up in social media. Now all of a sudden, they're going to say, 'let's make that contract public'”?
Think about putting this contract up. Potentially, individuals who are in ongoing negotiations will look at the terms of the contract and say, “We are not competitive,” or, “We should be more competitive,” or, “Oh, we're way too competitive.”
There is a risk. This risk is an unintended consequence.
As MPs, as representatives of Canadians, as the ones who have fiduciary responsibility to make sure that we mitigate risk, are we actually introducing a risk, an unintended consequence, by opening up the contract that puts the Government of Canada, the leadership in the world and investors coming to Canada at risk?
What would happen if we were considering exporting our SMRs or our CANDU reactors to a different part of the world, and all of a sudden the terms of the contract and our intellectual property were going to be opened?
What would we think as the Canadian government? Do we want to operate in that environment?
Now that we are over the fact that there is no ticking bomb, that there aren't 1,600 foreign workers coming over to take over the jobs, we're going to say that the real issue is that we should make the contract public, which is more risky.
I talked about the fact that it is our responsibility to mitigate risk. How we mitigate risk is by managing the disclosure of the document. How we manage risk is by ensuring that we make that document open to all of us. We are the representatives of Canadians—at least I'm the representative of the 100,000 people in my riding. They trust me; they voted me here. I'm going to have access to that document. I'm going to look at it. I'm going to ask what sections of it are going to get redacted and if it is going to put Canada at risk. I'm going to ask that question because, one way or another, we as members of Parliament, regardless of the motion and how it goes, are going to get access to the unredacted contract, and we're going to read that contract in a room.
I'm not willing to be part of a group of MPs who are going to put the interests of Canada and the interests of Canadian workers at risk by not thinking about unintended consequences. I'm not going to put the fact that our government proactively may be negotiating other terms, other battery plants.... How about if you're negotiating on the technology around carbon capture?