Good morning.
I would like to thank the committee for the opportunity to make this submission on behalf of CIPMA members regarding Bill C-14, an act to amend the Electricity and Gas Inspection Act and the Weights and Measures Act.
The Canadian Independent Petroleum Marketers Association represents the interests of independent fuel marketers, that is, the non-refiners, or non-majors, of our industry. CIPMA is a national, not-for-profit trade association, incorporated in Canada in 1996. Leadership for the association is a board of directors made up of owners and senior managers of the member companies.
CIPMA's member companies are the larger independent fuel marketers in Canada. Many are family owned, many are rural in their roots and emphasis, and most are national in scope. All are strong competitors and play a major role in the communities in which they operate.
I would like to name our members. They are, from west to east, PetroValue, based in Vancouver; Parkland Income Trust, based in Red Deer, Alberta; United Farmers of Alberta, or UFA, based in Calgary; Can-Op, of Thunder Bay, Ontario; McDougall Energy, based in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario; Davis Fuels, of Burford, Ontario; Gales, of Niagara Falls; Pioneer Petroleums, of Burlington, Ontario; Canadian Tire Petroleum, based in Toronto; Max Convenience; Cango of Burlington; Niapen Oil, based in Stoney Creek; MacEwen Petroleum, of Maxville, Ontario; Mr. Gas, of Orleans; Norcan Petroleum Products, of Montreal; Olco Petroleum, based in Montreal; Wilson Fuel, based in Halifax, Nova Scotia; and Co-Op Atlantic, of Moncton, New Brunswick. Collectively, we sell approximately 14 billion litres of fuel products in Canada.
CIPMA members participated in all aspects of the downstream marketing and distribution industry. The majority of CIPMA member companies are in the business of gasoline retailing, and the majority have operations in more than two provinces. Collectively, CIPMA members supply 20% of Canada's approximate 12,500 retail gas stations.
CIPMA believes that consumers have the right to get what they pay for, and CIPMA supports and believes that the retailer is responsible for the accuracy of their measuring devices. We see these as the two fundamental principles behind the current Weights and Measures Act and behind Bill C-14, and, again, CIPMA supports these fundamentals.
CIPMA has been active with Measurement Canada in their deliberations about pump accuracy since 2004. CIPMA provided input to this process formerly in 2008. At that time, we stated that the public has a right to be confident in their purchases at the gas pump and that CIPMA supports a mandatory inspection cycle of gasoline-dispensing devices. We reiterate that position here for this committee.
We support the objectives of Bill C-14, and, combined with robust regulations, we believe it will succeed in meeting its objectives, namely, providing consumers with confidence in the trade measuring devices used for purchases.
It is important to note that Measurement Canada, in their earlier appearance at this committee, testified that contrary to press reports, fraud or deliberate tampering is not the root cause of pumps found to be out of calibration. Rather, pumps wear, and the more volume a gasoline metering device pumps, the more it wears. This is the primary reason for pumps going out of calibration.
Retailers know this, so they undertake regular inspections and recalibrations of their pumps, even though they are not required to do so under the current legislative regime. Most CIPMA retailers inspect their pumps every two years, and some as often as every year. This is to ensure integrity. Inspections and recalibrations are a fundamental and well-accepted practice in our industry, and this practice explains the high compliance rates of the gasoline retailing industry. At 94%, gasoline retailing has one of the highest compliance rates of all measurement trade sectors.
Summarizing these three points for a moment, fraud and tampering are not the causes of gasoline pumps going out of calibration. Gasoline retailers regularly inspect and calibrate their pumps today, and the gasoline sector has one of the highest compliance rates of all the trade measurement sectors.
We still support the intent of Bill C-14, but given these three facts, we strongly recommend that the short name of the bill be changed. Since we are talking about accuracy, let's accurately name the bill. A more accurate name is the “consumer confidence in measurement act”, whether we're talking about gasoline, electricity, natural gas, salami, or green beans.
We are confident that together with properly crafted regulations, this bill will ensure consumer confidence in measurements. We look forward to working closely with Measurement Canada officials in the development of a fair regulatory regime for Bill C-14, soon to be known, we respectfully request, as the “consumer confidence in measurement act”.
Thank you. I'll be happy to answer your questions.