Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I'll do my best.
My name is Bruce Robertson, and over the past 18-plus months, I've been serving as the chief restructuring officer for AbitibiBowater as the company works through the challenging period of restructuring itself under the Canadian CCAA and U.S. chapter 11 creditor protection processes.
I'm pleased to respond to your request to appear today to provide my thoughts on Bill C-501.
I must say at the outset that we're in the final stages of restructuring AbitibiBowater, and the company anticipates emergence within the next couple of weeks. Through the restructuring efforts, the company has been transformed to become one of the lowest-cost forest products companies in North America, with 18 pulp and paper facilities--11 of which are in Canada--24 wood products facilities in Canada, and close to 12,000 employees. The company has $5 billion in revenues and markets its products in more than 70 countries around the world.
Now, as a restructuring professional, I'll do my best to help the committee in its review of Bill C-501.
I'm afraid that however well-intentioned, Bill C-501 would have significant unintended consequences and would likely further penalize the very people the bill's author desires to protect.
Let me explain with a real-life example. If the proposed legislation had been in force in Canada two years ago, AbitibiBowater would have most likely been forced to liquidate its Canadian assets. Why? Because required financing for the Canadian operations, both debtor-in-possession and exit financing, would not have been available due to the huge reserves necessary to account for the pension solvency deficit super-priority.
What would have happened? In a liquidation scenario, employees and retirees would have taken a significant loss in their pensions. Canadian pensions for the company would have paid anywhere between 65¢ and 80¢ on the dollar. In effect, this would have locked in losses at the absolute bottom of the market and would have had the opposite of the intended effect. Also, as a result, up to 8,500 direct AbitibiBowater Canadian jobs would have likely been lost. In addition to these direct jobs, another 32,000 Canadians working in indirect jobs in communities across Quebec and Ontario would have been impacted. More than 40,000 Canadians, mostly in rural regions that are economically dependent on the forestry sector, would have been out of work.
Furthermore, the headquarters of AbitibiBowater would most likely have then moved to the U.S., where the Canadian portion of the company would have likely restructured and emerged with its American mills operational, a further potential hollowing-out of Canadian corporate head offices.
This real-life example demonstrates that the proposed legislation puts Canadians, companies, employees, and our country overall at tremendous risk and at a significant competitive disadvantage.
Mr. Chairman, I encourage you and the other committee members to also review the public record on another company that was recently under CCAA protection, Terrace Bay Pulp. Again, if this bill had been in place, I believe that this company in northwestern Ontario would not have emerged. Four hundred direct jobs would have been lost, many times that number would have been affected in indirect employment, and the pensions would have been significantly and adversely impacted.
An area of grave concern I have with Bill C-501 relates to the ability of companies to raise capital in credit markets to operate their businesses and provide jobs to Canadians. If passed, this legislation would make it extraordinarily difficult for Canadian companies to raise capital. Canadians would once again be at a strategic disadvantage in the marketplace. Financial institutions would have to take into account the possibility of even greater losses if a company were to enter bankruptcy proceedings, thus raising the cost of doing business in Canada.
Canadian companies would suffer from reduced available liquidity. During the credit crisis over the past two years, all Canadians saw what a loss of liquidity means to the economy. I'm concerned that this proposed legislation would reduce the productivity and competitiveness of our nation. With fewer Canadians working and fewer companies making profits and paying taxes, our governments and the social programs they provide would be impacted.
I believe that the best way to deal with pension deficits with companies in creditor protection is the approach taken by AbitibiBowater. Positive collaboration by management with the unions, provincial governments, retiree groups, creditors, and other stakeholders has resulted in no reduction to the pension benefits of the 20,000 Canadian AbitibiBowater retirees, and the company will continue to pay 100% of pension benefits to retirees and beneficiaries as the company emerges from creditor protection.
Let me make one further point. With today's extraordinarily low interest rates, the way we calculate solvency of pension plans in Canada creates a flawed reality. The formula utilized in Canada results in a significantly larger headline solvency deficit relative to the U.S., for example. Because of these differences, the companies do not face a significant pension deficit south of the border.
I realize that it's not the subject of today's hearings, but I encourage federal and provincial governments to consider alternative calculation methods and pension solvency formulas, as well as pension insurance, improved regulation, and other reforms.
In summary, Bill C-501 will kill credit for many good businesses and put them in danger of liquidation. This would obviously not be good for employment or economic growth. It will also encourage businesses to cancel what remaining private sector pension plans exist. As the penalty in terms of lost credit and risk will be too high, it will not actually protect existing pensions better than the current regime.
Policies that help strengthen the financial position of companies are the best solution to ensure that pension benefits are paid over the long term. These policies would include those that attract capital and encourage investment to improve productivity and to create jobs and economic wealth.
Thanks, Mr. Chairman.