Thank you, Chairman.
My name is Aime Dimatteo, and I'm the director general of FedNor. Like my colleagues' organizations, FedNor is a regional development organization that is responsible for economic development, job creation, and economic diversification for the constituency that we serve, which in my case is northern Ontario. We do so through the delivery of our programs and initiatives, but just as importantly, we do so also through partnership and collaboration with all of our other federal departments and with the Province of Ontario in a very large way.
FedNor has a very large service area. FedNor's northern Ontario represents 90% of the land mass of the province of Ontario, but we have 7% of the population scattered across this very large geography. While more than half of the population lives in five major centres, the remaining population of 150 municipalities and 110 of 126 first nations in Ontario residing in the north quickly falls into very small population bases. Over 80% of the municipalities have populations of 2,000 or less. Probably close to 90% of our first nation communities have fewer than 1,000 people on reserves in the 110 communities that we serve. Of those 110 first nation communities, 29 of them are remote first nation communities that are accessible only by air and by winter road. That aboriginal population represents approximately 12% of northern Ontario's population, some 100,000 people, and it's a growing population in northern Ontario.
FedNor's organization serves this large constituency through our six offices located across northern Ontario, so we are extremely hands-on with all of the stakeholders that we serve across northern Ontario.
In a nutshell, the challenges are varied but significant. Notwithstanding the results of the delivery of our programs and our efforts through FedNor's programs and its collaboration, there are still significant challenges that remain. Some of these are cyclical in nature, including the dependency on natural resources that are susceptible to global economic influences. We see these fluctuations now playing out in the mining industry, and certainly in the steel industry, and not as recently in the forestry industry, where there was a major downturn. Now we're seeing the cycle starting to pick up again.
A large number of our communities, as I said, are small. They're rural, they're remote, and they lack the capacity, both fiscal and human, to undertake a lot of the economic opportunities that every once in a while do come in front of them. It requires a major effort by not only FedNor but all the players in northern Ontario to build that capacity that will enable us to get to the outcomes that we are all striving for, which is economic development, economic diversification and, of course, job creation.
Northern Ontario is faced with limited infrastructure—again given the large geography that we cover—including limited availability of broadband. We still have many small communities across this vast region that are unserviced with the most basic broadband that we generally take for granted.
While we have a declining population, the good news on the aboriginal communities' front is that their populations continue to grow and are becoming a force to be reckoned with from an economic development perspective.
Lastly, I'll mention the high energy costs across northern Ontario. Our major industries—forestry, mining, and steel—are huge users of energy, and the energy costs are extremely prohibitive, in some cases meaning the difference between their making investments and availing themselves of growth opportunities, which are not possible with some reduction in high and growing energy costs.
Notwithstanding these challenges, we certainly view the glass as half full. We think there are great opportunities that come from these challenges. Those include investments in new technology and value-added products, and I'll be pleased to provide examples later on if the opportunity provides itself.
We are advancing innovation clusters. In some of my discussion in the introductory remarks, there was a comment made about the Sudbury centre of excellence in mining innovation, which is a world-class cluster when it comes to mining. Whether it be deep mining, supply and services, or product development, we lead by example for the world.
We have an expanding ICT sector that is taking advantage of working with SMEs, small and medium-sized enterprises, that are adopting technology and are becoming companies that we know and expect we will be able to work with and to grow in the future.
I referred earlier to the active and increasing aboriginal population, which is taking on a more proactive and participatory position in economic development than ever before. This presents a great opportunity to advance a lot of resource development opportunities in the far north, in particular, where many of our remote communities are located.
We also have growing opportunities in both tourism and agriculture. Where the Canadian dollar stands right now certainly provides an incentive for tourists to visit northern Ontario. Again, 90% of the land mass is a beautiful wilderness. It is attracting world-class attention. We are seeing visitors from a variety of countries around the world who come to visit and play in northern Ontario.
Agriculture is on the rise. We have affordable agricultural land in northern Ontario. On average, you can buy an acre of land for as low as $500, whereas in southern Ontario that same acre of land will start at somewhere around $5,000 and may go as high as $25,000.
There is a lot of available land, and we are seeing industry players wanting to take advantage of that. We've talked to the Canadian Cattlemen's Association of Canada and to cattlemen's associations in Ontario who are looking for these kinds of opportunities.
Also, given, if you will, climate change, we are seeing that our agricultural businesses are able to grow a different kind of product mix because they can grow it earlier and the season is lasting longer. That is also providing great opportunities for the agricultural businesses in northern Ontario to extend their reach and their capacities.
It would be remiss of me not to talk about the budget pressures that FedNor and my other colleagues are facing. FedNor operates four programs. Three are national in context, but our flagship program is called the northern Ontario development program. It focuses on three priorities: innovation; business growth and competitiveness; and community economic development. It's not by coincidence that these three priority areas align directly with the government's priorities and the mandate across the country to make the economy grow.
Our program has experienced a continued and steady increase in demand over the last five years, and we do not see the demand stopping any time soon. Unfortunately, the demand is exceeding the current level of funding available to FedNor; hence, the importance that FedNor puts not only on its own grants and contributions programs, but also on the collaboration and partnerships that we look for with other federal departments, other programs, and with the Province of Ontario and all of its ministries to ensure that we can maximize the right revenues brought to the right project at the right time, so that no good project goes unfunded.
We have many single-industry and resource-dependent communities, in forestry and mining in particular, and in the last downturn in the forestry industry, some 35 or 40 of these communities were extremely impacted. They lost their fundamental economic engines and had to recreate themselves. We are quite thankful that we're seeing a rebound in the industry. It is not as job-intensive as it was in the past, but nonetheless we are now seeing investments coming back into the forestry industry.
As a matter of fact, these threatened single-industry communities were referenced in our minister's mandate letter as communities that will require additional assistance to help them achieve a better strategic plan, outcomes, and diversification, so their economies can and will continue to prosper and will not always be dependent on the vagaries of a single industry.
In conclusion, FedNor will continue to act as the Government of Canada's lead economic development organization in northern Ontario. We believe that we are well positioned to deliver on our mandate, the government's priorities, and to work in unison with all of our federal partners to ensure that our indigenous communities and our small municipalities across northern Ontario are offered the opportunities and provided with the backing to spur on economic prosperity and diversification.
Thank you very much, Chair. I look forward to continuing the discussion.