Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Thank you, Mr. Chair, for having giving me the opportunity to talk about Bombardier's view of the situation currently being experienced by the aerospace industry.
I will make my comments very short and informal, if I may. I know the discussion will be a rich one, and I look forward to participating in it.
Let me introduce the company briefly. Bombardier is the third-largest manufacturer of civil aircraft in the world, after Boeing and Airbus. It is also the leading manufacturer of business aircraft and regional aircraft in the world. It is a significant presence in the industry worldwide and a very proud and active member of the Canadian aerospace industry, as a sector.
We are also--and this is significant in terms of the business model that we pursue--the world's largest manufacturer of passenger rail solutions; that is, railcars and systems associated with passenger rail. This is a part of our business that is less well known in Canada because much of the activity that we pursue is in Europe and new emerging markets.
Together, this company employs 60,000 people worldwide, of whom over one-third work in Canada, even though well over 95% of our product, at the moment, is exported for markets other than Canada.
If there is more interest in pursuing these big subjects on the identity of the company, I would obviously be delighted to do that, but let me come to the specifics of the situation. We have been, as has all of the industry, deeply affected by the economic crisis and the fiscal crisis that the world markets are facing. We are taking steps to ensure that we not only survive but thrive despite these global setbacks. Doing that takes a series of measures from the company, including making painful cuts in our employment rate and taking a very dynamic approach to managing our costs, including those associated with our supply chain.
But it's also a moment of opportunity for us, because we know that the market will rebound, and we have a product that will in effect meet the new challenges of the industry when it is launched in 2013. I'm speaking about the CSeries aircraft. I mention that in particular because the Canadian government is an active participant in launching the pre-competitive phase of that aircraft. This aircraft will be a world-leading product. It will have an important Canadian component, and we look to it to sustain us into the future.
I did mention that the Canadian government will be a partner in this, investing in the pre-competitive stage of the development of this aircraft. As a footnote, let me also say that in the past we've had an important partnership with the Canadian government since the 1960s, in one way or another. It has been a mutually beneficial one. Bombardier has paid back over 131% of the closed arrangements that we've had with the Canadian government over the years, which is a reasonably good rate of return.
In the TPC, the Technology Partnerships Canada program, which was the most recent of these programs where the government participated in risk-sharing in the aerospace sector, we benefited, I think, from 4% of that program, or $134 million, if I'm not mistaken. We've already paid back 85% of that. That was a program launched in 1996.
So we are good partners, and we intend to be. I think we're a good demonstration of how a partnership in this sector, as my colleagues have pointed out, is not only critically important but also a key to success in the future.
Let me speak a bit more about the present circumstances. We have been hit. As I mentioned, Bombardier is a leading manufacturer of business aircraft in the world by value. We have now experienced a 25% drop in orders for business aircraft in the last few months. This is nothing short of dramatic. As you can imagine, this has had knock-on effects on the way we have had to do business.
At the same time, however, there has been a 10% rise in orders for our regional aircraft, in particular for the Q400 turboprop aircraft, which I hope many of you will have flown in service to Toronto. Richard Bertrand just mentioned that the service is providing so much satisfaction that they've ordered more of those aircraft.
That aircraft has taken the world by storm, if I can put it that way. It's the most environmentally friendly passenger aircraft now being made, and it is also the most fuel-efficient, thanks to, among other things, the engines and other technical qualities of that aircraft.
Our business is balanced, but like every business today, it is precarious because every business is subject to the vagaries of the international economic climate. The layoffs that we've had to make have been very painful. They have been phased in as much as we could, but we have had to lay off close to 15% of the workforce of Bombardier Aerospace in the last four months.
These cuts have been spread across our operations around the world. Our Montreal and Belfast facilities have taken the worst of the hit. In Toronto at Downsview, where the Q400 is being made, they've been somewhat less, but there have also been cuts in the United States and in Mexico.
We have taken some very, very difficult measures, and we will have to continue to do so.
The critical component of the challenge we face, which is ultimately the heart of the challenge we face, is not our lack of liquidity or our lack of opportunity or our lack of innovation, in all of which we have made every effort to be in a leading position, but that of our customers. We can only be as successful as our customers are and our customers face tremendous challenges--airlines as well as leasing companies and individual corporations. Their problem is related to the capital, the cash crunch that is affecting all businesses around the world, the shortage of liquidity in the capital markets. This is not a situation that is about to be reversed quickly or automatically, but it will be reversed.
However, in the meantime, we, like every other original equipment manufacturer in this business, rely very strongly on our export credit agencies to keep funding going. As I mentioned to you, our sales, certainly in aerospace, are virtually all for the export market, so the continued successful and mutually beneficial participation of EDC in this field, as others have mentioned, is absolutely critical to our success.
Let me close with a few other observations about elements of our cooperation with the government that are also of an extraordinary importance. So far, we have not talked about international trade in depth here, but as I said, we are an international business, as is everyone else at this table. We all rely on international markets, so the health of the international trading system is of extraordinary importance to us.
The capacity of Canadian exporters to access markets, both established and new, is of the first order of importance, so I did want to take this occasion to salute the efforts of the government to conclude free trade agreements, most particularly and most dramatically with the European Union. As you know, that process is now under way. This will make a big difference to all our industries, if for no other reason than it will help to provide labour mobility, which is one of the very important aspects of this global industry.
So free trade is extremely important. The resistance to protectionism, under whatever guise, is extremely important. The role of our diplomatic missions abroad in terms of promoting the image of Canadian industry is extremely important. The networks that are established around the world at the political level, as well as the business level and the official level, are extremely important, especially in markets where governments and economies overlap. In some cases, these are the largest governments and largest economies in the world. All of these things are of material contribution to our success.
More particularly, I have mentioned the continuing and, as I say, sustained and sustainable partnership with EDC, which is an extraordinarily important aspect of our business, as it is for the rest of our colleagues.
Last, of course, though by no means least, the continuing commitment of the government to partner with the industry in general in the form of SADI, a program that has been initiated under this government, will be critical, not just to the major industries and major companies represented here, but as Claude so graphically illustrated, to this vast group of companies participating in this sector in Canada.
I can tell you, just as a snapshot, that Bombardier Aerospace has roughly 500 suppliers directly supplying components to our company. And a large group—it's so large I don't even want to put a number on it, but certainly it has well over a thousand, perhaps as many as two thousand, in it—supplies services and other ancillary products to the company.
So this sector has a huge multiplier effect. It is a dynamic one and it is poised for growth. It has sustained itself through thick times and thin. If I may put it this way, it is a jewel, I think, in the industrial crown of this country that is worth keeping and polishing.
Thank you very much.