Thank you very much for having me, and good morning.
I'm happy to bring my perspectives from the Canadian Home Builders' Association on advancements in homebuilding technologies.
There's no question that we have many challenges ahead of us as we try to address a variety of crises, from housing affordability to lack of housing supply to climate change mitigation and resiliency. We have a shrinking workforce when we actually need to be building many more homes. Technology, innovation and, most importantly, creating an environment where those can be more readily adopted need to be part of the solution.
I'm hoping most of you here are familiar with our CHBA sector transition strategy. I know many of you are, and I've provided it to the clerk to provide it to you if you haven't received a copy.
This strategy is very much about how we transform the homebuilding sector to make better use of factory-built home technology to improve productivity, while also addressing many of the other issues I mentioned above. It has a heavy emphasis on explaining what the barriers are and how we overcome those barriers.
The short version of how we move to much more factory-built construction in the sector is that we need to create much more certainty and de-risk the types of investments that are required to move from low-overhead site-built approaches to high-overhead factories. Whether you're talking about modular construction, panelized systems or even 3-D printing, the investment requirements are high, and the risks in the boom-and-bust nature of the housing market are even higher.
Things like volume-based low interest loans, tax credits, grant funding to support transition, modular construction finance insurance and much more are needed.
We also need a more steady pipeline of housing, which can be fixed by changes of the kind we are seeing in the mortgage rule system to drive more buyers and hence more construction. I would include that there is a remaining need to address the stress test.
One of the biggest barriers to getting more innovation, including factory-built systems, into play is not financing or technology; it's the barriers at the municipal level: the differences from municipality to municipality in terms of zoning, bylaws, site plan rules and the ridiculously wide range of completely different interpretations of the exact same building codes, all of which prevent scaling technology, house plans and investments.
We need the provinces, with the support of the federal government, to step in and create harmonization at the municipal level. We also need a national code interpretation centre that is binding, so that code solutions that are proven in one town aren't rejected in the next town.
We also need a less expensive and more nimble Canadian construction materials centre that can help new technologies become acceptable solutions in the building code more quickly.
We need to stop over-regulating. Regulation is the enemy of innovation, and it is what we are facing right now. There are way too many requirements going into building codes and standards these days. The pace of change is more than the industry can handle, more than building officials can handle and more than the code development system can handle.
Regulation is getting rushed through, which ends up creating unintended consequences, like overheating in homes. It's driving up prices and slowing productivity. Instead of spending time innovating, industry is spending time in hundreds of codes and standards meetings, trying to bring reality to a system that if left to its devices, will create gold-plated houses that no one will be able to afford and that may cause massive problems for their occupants.
Meanwhile, voluntary standards and the innovative and cost-effective approaches to meeting new challenges are not nearly enough the focus for government and industry that they should be, yet this is where smart innovation and solutions occur.
Are there new technologies emerging? Yes, there are many of them, but we need to create an environment where more adoption can happen faster. That doesn't come from regulation. We need a huge emphasis on affordability. We need affordability as a core objective of the national building code and all the standards it calls up. We need a full press on government research, in collaboration with industry, to drive down the cost of construction through innovation, because lower-cost innovations are always adopted faster by the industry.
We're also a very resilient industry, because we are an industry of small businesses and micro-businesses. However, in this market, trial and error can be very expensive, and potentially devastating to deal with as a business. We need technology adoption programming that helps our industry members try new technologies with full de-risking and lessons learned feedback loops to support industry and manufacturers to continue to advance.
There are some super-promising technologies, like AI, for accelerating municipal planning and approval processes. We are keenly watching AI-driven robotics that could make investing in a modular or panelized factory a fraction of what the cost is today.
I'm happy to talk to you about these emerging technologies and many more, but I'll end with one thing as we look at emerging technologies: We need to acknowledge the actual realities of the industry, why it is structured the way it is, and the importance of affordability as a key driver in innovation, and we need to create a better policy environment for industry to be able to adopt emerging technologies. With that environment, we can accelerate change at a much faster pace to face the myriad challenges ahead.
I look forward to talking about all of this with you.