Evidence of meeting #35 for Industry, Science and Technology in the 42nd Parliament, 1st Session. (The original version is on Parliament’s site, as are the minutes.) The winning word was project.

A recording is available from Parliament.

On the agenda

MPs speaking

Also speaking

Robert R. McLeod  Premier, Government of the Northwest Territories
Wally Schumann  Minister of Industry, Tourism and Investment, Minister of Transportation, and Minister of Public Works and Services, Government of the Northwest Territories
Robert C. McLeod  Deputy Premier, Minister of Environment and Natural Resources, Minister of Finance, and Minister of Human Resources, Government of the Northwest Territories
Glen Abernethy  Minister, Department of Health and Social Services, Government of the Northwest Territories
Alfred Moses  Minister, Department of Education, Culture and Employment, Government of the Northwest Territories

3:35 p.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Dan Ruimy

Welcome, everybody, to meeting 35 of the Standing Committee on Industry, Science and Technology. Today we have the honour and the pleasure to have some outside guests here from the Government of the Northwest Territories.

We have the Honourable Robert McLeod, premier. Welcome today, sir.

We have the Honourable Robert C. McLeod, deputy premier, Minister of Environment and Natural Resources, Minister of Finance, and Minister of Human Resources. We have the Honourable Caroline Cochrane, Minister of Municipal and Community Affairs. We have the Honourable Louis Sebert, Minister of Lands and Minister of Justice. We have the Honourable Alfred Moses, Minister of Education, Culture and Employment. Finally, we have the Honourable Glen Abernethy, Minister of Health and Social Services.

We thank you and welcome you to our industry, science, and technology committee.

We understand you have some presentations, so without further ado, I'll give you the floor.

3:35 p.m.

Robert R. McLeod Premier, Government of the Northwest Territories

Thank you, Mr. Chair.

I will also introduce Mr. Wally Schumann, Minister of Industry, Tourism and Investment, Minister of Transportation, and Minister of Public Works and Services.

3:35 p.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Dan Ruimy

My apologies, Mr. Schumann.

3:35 p.m.

Wally Schumann Minister of Industry, Tourism and Investment, Minister of Transportation, and Minister of Public Works and Services, Government of the Northwest Territories

I'm good.

3:35 p.m.

Premier, Government of the Northwest Territories

Robert R. McLeod

Thank you, committee, for meeting with the Government of the Northwest Territories this afternoon.

We are here for some business meetings with the Prime Minister, ministers, and a number of standing committees about some of the challenges and opportunities facing the people of the Northwest Territories today. We're very pleased to have the opportunity to meet with the Standing Committee on Industry, Science and Technology.

Before we get to the presentation, I would like to take a few minutes to talk about our territory. I was pleased to hear that some of you had been up to the Northwest Territories and visited us.

In the Northwest Territories, 44,000 residents live in 33 communities that stretch from the southern border with the provinces of Saskatchewan and Alberta to Banks Island in the Arctic Ocean. Our biggest community is Yellowknife, with approximately 21,000 people, while our smallest community is Kakisa, with fewer than 50. Twenty-seven of our communities have fewer than 1,000 people, and 16 of these have fewer than 500.

Only 12 of the Northwest Territories' 33 communities have year-round road access to southern Canada, and four of them can only be reached by air or water. Although the Northwest Territories has substantial hydroelectricity potential, only eight Northwest Territories communities are powered by hydro. The remaining 25 are powered by stand-alone diesel generators.

Lack of transportation and energy options drives up the cost of living for Northwest Territories residents far beyond what our fellow Canadians face. In 2015, for example, residents of Ulukhaktok paid $8.25 for a 540-millilitre tin of tomatoes, and residents of Fort McPherson paid $7.85 for a single litre of milk.

People in Fort Smith, a community of 2,500 people near the Taltson hydro facility, pay 16¢ a kilowatt-hour for electricity. Most of the territory pays much more. In Yellowknife, home to half the Northwest Territories population, we pay 30¢ per kilowatt-hour, while the cost in diesel communities is 65¢ a kilowatt-hour—compare that to on-peak rates of 18¢ per kilowatt-hour here in Ottawa.

At the same time, the Northwest Territories is experiencing the effects of climate change at a faster pace than southern Canada. In Inuvik, the average annual temperature has already risen by 4°C since the 1950s, while in the southern part of the Northwest Territories, we are already experiencing annual temperature increases of 2°C.

Climate change is resulting in coastal erosion, thawing permafrost, landslides, increased snow loads on buildings, and drought. Shorter winter road and marine operating seasons as a result of warmer temperatures result in incomplete or more costly community resupplies. Building techniques have had to adapt, resulting in more complicated and costly public infrastructure projects. At the same time, transportation of people and goods is being disrupted, as permafrost degradation contributes to uneven roads and runways.

One thing about northerners though is that we have always had to rely on our own ingenuity. With limited access to outside resources and supplies for much of its history, the people of the Northwest Territories have always had to be creative with their solutions. We continue to use that creativity and innovation to address modern problems and lead the way in applying new techniques and technology for cold-weather building construction, road construction, and renewable power solutions.

We are second in Canada in installed solar photovoltaic capacity per capita and a national leader in wood pellet use. Projects like the Mackenzie Valley fibre optic line and the Inuvik to Tuktoyaktuk highway demonstrate our forward thinking.

We think the lessons that we have learned in the Northwest Territories can be applied to southern Canada as well, particularly in transition to a green economy.

We are here to today to talk to you about three priority projects where we believe there's substantial opportunity for the Government of the Northwest Territories and the Government Canada to work together to bring about transformative change in the north and to achieve national goals with respect to climate change.

Mr. Chair, I would now like to turn you over to Minister Wally Schumann, who will speak about these opportunities in greater detail.

3:40 p.m.

Minister of Industry, Tourism and Investment, Minister of Transportation, and Minister of Public Works and Services, Government of the Northwest Territories

Wally Schumann

I'm very pleased to be here this afternoon to provide the committee with some perspectives from the Government of the Northwest Territories on areas where we believe the Northwest Territories can make significant contributions to the overall national objectives related to green energy, and can support economic growth and development in the knowledge-based economy.

I would like to begin by speaking about some priorities in the Northwest Territories that we believe will provide benefits for the residents of the Northwest Territories and for Canada.

The first priority is phase one of the Taltson hydroelectric expansion project. This project would see the expansion of the existing Taltson hydroelectric system in the southeast area of the Northwest Territories. The project includes a 60-megawatt expansion of the Taltson hydro site and the construction of a 200-kilometre transmission line to Saskatchewan. This project is a potential game-changer for the N.W.T. and for Canada, in increasing the availability of clean, renewable power.

By connecting NT Hydro—currently stranded—to the national energy grid through Saskatchewan, we could then help reduce the national greenhouse gas emissions by 360,000 tonnes annually over several decades. Given the expected life of the facility, that is a big step forward in achieving the national climate change priorities and in living up to the terms of the Vancouver declaration. The expansion would rely on existing water storage, with no new flooding to generate ongoing revenues. In a territory where aboriginal partnerships are part of our daily reality, this project would be built in partnership with aboriginal governments, creating economic opportunities for them and for aboriginal-owned businesses across the N.W.T.

Our second priority is innovative renewable energy solutions for remote northern communities that currently rely on expensive, carbon-intensive diesel for power. Stand-alone diesel generation is the only source of power for 25 of the Northwest Territories' 33 communities. This situation is costly from both an economic and an environmental perspective. The Government of the Northwest Territories has been advancing solutions for this issue for over a decade now. What we have today are the best and most innovative solutions for addressing diesel-generated power use in Canada's remote north. Like many of our priorities, this one involves several approaches designed to respond to the unique demands of our many communities. It includes a wind energy project in lnuvik, high-penetration solar for projects in 15 off-grid communities, and a hydro transmission line to Fort Providence.

The lnuvik wind project includes the development of up to four megawatts of wind energy and a 10-kilometre transmission line to the town of lnuvik. We estimate that this project will reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 4,300 tonnes per year and will eliminate the need for 1.3 million litres of diesel annually in the largest diesel community in the Northwest Territories. This is a groundbreaking project that would be the first large-scale wind project north of the Arctic Circle in Canada.

The second solution includes the installation of high-penetration solar, with batteries or efficient variable speed generators, in 15 diesel-powered communities in the Northwest Territories. Batteries and variable generators are the only way to significantly decrease greenhouse gas emissions in remote communities, and can achieve diesel and greenhouse gas emission reductions of 20% to 25%, as opposed to the 2% to 4% from solar alone. We have already demonstrated the success of this approach in two High Arctic communities: Colville Lake and Aklavik. Reproducing this success in 15 additional communities in the N.W.T. would provide annual greenhouse gas reductions of 2,600 tonnes per year, would improve energy security for these communities, and would advance our national goal to reduce our reliance on diesel power generation.

The third solution is the construction of a transmission line to connect Fort Providence, one of the N.W.T.'s larger diesel communities, to the Taltson hydroelectric system. This transmission line will reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 4,900 tonnes per year and will permanently supply renewable power to the community.

The final priority I would like to talk about is the construction of all-weather road infrastructure for adapting to climate change impacts. As the premier indicated at the beginning of our presentation, inadequate transportation links are a challenge for N.W.T. communities. With only 33% of our land mass within 100 kilometres of an all-weather road, we are highly dependent on seasonal transportation links such as winter roads and ice roads. Climate change is greatly affecting the reliability of these links, particularly at vulnerable ice crossings.

New road corridor projects, such as the Mackenzie Valley Highway and the Slave geological access corridor, will mitigate the impacts of climate change, connect our communities to each other and to the rest of Canada, and increase the safety, reliability, and resiliency of the transportation system.

At the same time, these new links would enable new trade opportunities and economic prosperity. The Mackenzie Valley Highway corridor will connect several N.W.T. communities to the public highway system and provide reliable access to a wealth of petroleum and mineral resources. Substantial planning work has already been completed. Priority components of this project include the construction of the Bear River bridge, engineering and environmental studies for the remaining Wrigley to Norman Wells phases, and the construction of the Tulita to Normal Wells segment, including the completion of environmental assessment activities.

The Slave geological province is the site of N.W.T.'s existing diamond mines and still contains a wealth of untapped mineral potential. However, climate change has resulted in shortened operating seasons for the existing winter road servicing the region, and this has resulted in significant transportation costs and operational difficulties for mining developments. An all-weather corridor into the region would eliminate these difficulties, lowering the cost of exploration and development for industry and supporting the N.W.T. in reaching its full economic potential.

These priority areas build on innovative work that the Government of the Northwest Territories has already been doing, and I would like to take a moment to highlight a few areas that should be of interest to the committee.

First, we are very pleased that this winter we will see the completion of the Mackenzie Valley fibre link. This fibre optic line will cover more than 1,100 kilometres and bring state-of-the-art, high-speed fibre optic communication to small and remote communities along the Mackenzie Valley Highway. This will support economic development and diversification opportunities for our residents and give the Government of the Northwest Territories innovative new ways to deliver programs and services, such as health and education services, to our smaller communities.

In addition to these benefits, the Mackenzie Valley fibre link will provide high-speed connection to the Inuvik satellite station facility, supporting near real-time transfer of Canadian and international satellite data. The data received from these satellites is used for environmental monitoring, northern science, sustainable resource development, climate change, and security and surveillance, particularly for Canada's vast Arctic regions.

Natural Resources Canada, the Swedish space agency, the German space agency, the Norwegian space agency, and private companies already have dishes at the Inuvik satellite station. We expect that, over the next 20 years, the number of satellite dishes at Inuvik could increase to about 25. I'm sure you would share in our vision of Inuvik becoming a hub of research and the potential that the satellite station has, along with the fibre link project, to provide a variety of economic opportunities in the north.

As has been noted, the Northwest Territories has a particular interest in renewable energy, so for many years the GNWT has been investing millions of dollars into energy projects with a focus on displacing imported fossil fuels. The GNWT has already led efforts to reduce emissions through energy efficiency and by using low-carbon heating sources, such as wood pellets. This extends to our own assets. By 2017-18, nearly 20% of all GNWT heating for facilities like offices, schools, and health centres will be provided through the use of biomass. Overall, our electricity system is powered mainly by hydroelectricity. In an average year, over 75% of community electricity is produced using renewable hydroelectricity. The Northwest Territories is second in Canada in installed solar PV capacity per capita. In a territory that is dark for significant parts of the year, this speaks to our openness to innovation.

Speaking of innovation, I would be remiss if I did not note the work on the Inuvik to Tuktoyaktuk highway. This highway is 138 kilometres long and is a testament to the partnership between the federal and territorial governments and to the need to use leading-edge science and innovation to complete these types of projects. In order to complete the highway construction and protect the permafrost along the highway alignment, typical cut-and-fill techniques could not be used for this project.

These traditional construction methods cut into protective layers of surface vegetation and organics with the possible result of thawing in the permafrost below. To protect the permafrost, our design used fills only. Geotextile fabric was placed between the existing ground and the construction materials along the entire highway. The bulk of construction activities also took place during the winter months to preserve the permafrost.

Also important is that the completion of the Inuvik to Tuktoyaktuk highway will enable the extension of the Mackenzie Valley fibre link to Tuktoyaktuk.

Self-reliance has made northerners innovative people, and the Government of the Northwest Territories is eager to share the benefits of our innovation with Canada and the world. With the partnership of the Government of Canada, we think we can capitalize on the innovative work that we have already done to adapt to climate change, reduce the cost of living, and transition to renewable energy sources to create increased benefits for people of the Northwest Territories and help achieve national objectives.

Thank you, Mr. Chair.

3:50 p.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Dan Ruimy

Thank you very much, gentlemen, for your presentation.

We have until 4:30 p.m., so I suggest we go to five-minute segments and just go back and forth until time runs out.

We'll start off with Mr. Longfield, for five minutes, please.

3:50 p.m.

Liberal

Lloyd Longfield Liberal Guelph, ON

Thanks, Mr. Chair.

Thanks to all of you for travelling the long distance to be with us. It's much more convenient for us to see you when you come to us, but it would be great to go and visit the Northwest Territories. It's the only part of Canada I haven't been to yet, but I have seen the presentation on the highway design and the protection of the permafrost layer. Knowing what has happened over the last 30 years, there have been some drastic changes. Could you comment a little bit on the risk we face, and the need for science to be on top of this?

3:50 p.m.

Minister of Industry, Tourism and Investment, Minister of Transportation, and Minister of Public Works and Services, Government of the Northwest Territories

Wally Schumann

Thank you for that.

Climate change is going to be the big driver of this whole thing. The one thing that wasn't in our presentation is that we've done a number of scientific things along the corridor of this road. I encourage everyone to go to the Government of the Northwest Territories website and go to transportation. There are links to the Tuktoyaktuk highway there and it will have pictures and it has all the work that has been done there.

Climate change is one of the key drivers on this thing. As I said, we've done a couple of things there. We have a number of thermistors to track all the thawing and melting of the permafrost. There are a bunch of test sections that we've done in partnership with the federal government in a culvert-type system. That's being tried out there. There are a couple of geotextile different layers of construction on different sections.

All these things are going to feed into the innovation and technology that's needed to construct more roads in northern and remote communities that are susceptible to permafrost degradation, so I think this is going to be a good test highway for innovation and stuff moving forward and how we design some of these things.

3:50 p.m.

Liberal

Lloyd Longfield Liberal Guelph, ON

It's great to hear all of the countries that are involved with research up in Inuvik, and making sure that Canada is also part of that research. I've seen the ventilation systems under the highway.

I'd like to pivot over to.... It's a great story that you're on the forefront of climate change initiatives, given how much of an impact that is already having on your territory. Food supply is also something that you've experimented with. There is a greenhouse that has been developed out of an old hockey rink, as an example. I also sit on the agriculture committee and we're looking at what we can do to help improve healthy food selection in the north. Your project has struggled a little bit over the years in terms of the rotation of people on the board and trying to maintain the knowledge that you've been accumulating.

Could you maybe comment on how the agriculture industry could be brought north to help new ways of developing greenhouses, or new ways of developing food for the north, using Canadian technology?

3:50 p.m.

Minister of Industry, Tourism and Investment, Minister of Transportation, and Minister of Public Works and Services, Government of the Northwest Territories

Wally Schumann

In fact, I'm meeting with the agriculture minister later today to talk about Growing Forward 2, which has been of great help to the Northwest Territories in developing our agricultural strategy.

In the southern regions, where I'm from, there is a significant amount of agriculture. They don't have an abundance of land available, but there are quite a few producers in the south. But as a government, we have greenhouses in all 33 communities now, promoting the growth of food in all the communities to address the food shortages and the cost of living in the Northwest Territories. We continue, hopefully, to work with the Department of Agriculture and Agri-Food as to how to develop and promote a movement to commercial agriculture in the Northwest Territories, be it hydroponics or other types of things.

I think a lot of people are surprised when they come north that the Northwest Territories even has an egg quota. We have a farm that produces a significant number of eggs. One of the challenges around that is how to supply eggs to the rest of the Northwest Territories, and the transportation logistics issue.

3:55 p.m.

Liberal

Lloyd Longfield Liberal Guelph, ON

I have less than a minute, and I'm sorry to interrupt you, but I want to mention that the University of Guelph has developed some vertical farms for use on Mars or other planets, places of extreme climate. Vertical farms need electricity. Part of your argument around electricity is taking out diesel, but also you need electricity to grow food. Could you maybe speak to that a bit?

3:55 p.m.

Minister of Industry, Tourism and Investment, Minister of Transportation, and Minister of Public Works and Services, Government of the Northwest Territories

Wally Schumann

As you've seen in our presentation around electricity, we are presently out doing an energy strategy right now. We believe that moving forward to help get remote communities off diesel fuel is going to require a combination of a number of things, be it solar or variable speed generators, to bring stability to the situation and lower greenhouse gases.

Moving forward, the cost of energy is extremely high in the Northwest Territories, and most of the northern communities are subsidized substantially to bring the rates down to the Yellowknife rate. Just to give the members of the committee some idea of what electricity costs, in some of the northern communities it is way in excess of 60¢, but it's subsidized back down to the Yellowknife rate of 30¢.

Thank you very much.

3:55 p.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Dan Ruimy

We're going to move to Mr. Dreeshen.

You have five minutes.

3:55 p.m.

Conservative

Earl Dreeshen Conservative Red Deer—Mountain View, AB

Thank you very much, Mr. Premier and all of the honourable ministers, for being here today.

I did have the opportunity with Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development to go to the territories as we were studying barriers to development a number of years ago. Certainly we met some amazing individuals. I noticed in some of your material that you were talking about your aboriginal-owned businesses. The people we met, and I've continued to say this for years, are some of the best CEOs you could find; it wouldn't matter where they were. Here in the rest of Canada, we should be proud of the expertise that is there and the great work that is done.

I know that one of the problems we have here is the economy. You're having some problems as well in the same way because you have great natural resources that are taking a hit right now. Coming from Alberta, we're well aware of some of the concerns that are there. Again, you've had $1.281 billion in federal transfers, $44 million in Canada health transfer, $16 million in Canada social transfer, $1.22 million in territorial formula financing, but it's even less. It's less money than it was last year. These are concerns that we have. Even the Canada health transfer is budgeted for less than 3% for next year. Hopefully that's something the federal government is going to take a look at.

Again, when we look at energy, and we look at the situations that occur there, I was speaking with a number of folks earlier today, and I think I was the only one old enough to know about the Mackenzie Valley pipeline debate. If we wanted to talk energy, maybe some of these things could have been of benefit over the years. They may or may not have fit into some of the solutions that we could have had. Again, that's gone by the wayside.

I'm just wondering if you could expand a little more because we are looking at a broadband study later on. We have some unique ideas as far as making sure that you build fibre as you're building roads. I think that's a critical thing that people have to be aware of.

Can you expand upon how your work in that area is going to help the communities that you serve? Perhaps you could comment on some of my other rants as well.

3:55 p.m.

Premier, Government of the Northwest Territories

Robert R. McLeod

Maybe I'll start. Certainly with oil and gas, we have an abundance of oil and gas, but now it's more potential than reality, I guess. We have the ultimate irony, as we always say, where we're sitting on this oil and gas, yet in Inuvik, we haul LNG from Vancouver to generate electricity other than diesel. We don't have the economies of scale to drill a well and use the natural gas to heat our communities because it's very expensive. That's why we rely a lot on imported diesel.

On the Mackenzie Valley fibre optic link, we are connecting all of our communities up and down the Mackenzie Valley. One of the ways to deal with the long distances and lack of infrastructure is to at least have an Internet connection so it will help in our education, and we're starting to see a lot more online purchasing.

As Minister McLeod is responsible for the project, he'll go into more detail.

4 p.m.

Robert C. McLeod Deputy Premier, Minister of Environment and Natural Resources, Minister of Finance, and Minister of Human Resources, Government of the Northwest Territories

Thank you, Mr. Premier.

We've been working with some of the space agencies in Europe. We have seven dishes in Inuvik right now, if I'm not mistaken, and I think there are plans for four more. The Italians are actually coming on board. That's going to bring some revenue to the community of Inuvik.

Next spring, we should have lights on. We ran into a bit of trouble crossing one of the streams, which held up our winter construction. However, there's a lot of potential to it and we've actually doubled the amount of lines that we're putting into the fibre. They were going to put in 24 lines of fibre, but our minister of finance of the day realized that it wasn't going to cost that much extra to put in another 24 lines, so we have a 48-line fibre. In the future, if we have to expand, we don't have to run another line, because we have the capacity there.

I'm sure you've heard about the location of Inuvik and being able to get satellite information off satellites that are coming over. We were over visiting with DLR and they were saying that, in Inuvik, much like Kiruna, Sweden, you have a half hour to get information off a satellite as it's coming over. They said that, in satellite talk, that's a lifetime, so we're quite pleased with that.

I know it's a high-tech industry, but our kids nowadays are all good on computers and everything. If we can tap into some of that opportunity, if there are opportunities there for some training, I think that's really going to help too. We have a lot of people coming to the Aurora Research Institute in Inuvik, too, doing a lot of studies, especially on climate change, and this is going to be beneficial to them as well.

We're hoping to have lights on next winter. I think we can have lights on right up to Fort Good Hope. Past Fort Good Hope is where we're having some issues with the terrain, but we'll get that resolved this year and it will be lights on throughout the territory. It's going to be huge.

4 p.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Dan Ruimy

Thank you.

We're going to move to Mr. Masse, please, for five minutes.

November 23rd, 2016 / 4 p.m.

NDP

Brian Masse NDP Windsor West, ON

Thank you, Mr. Chair.

Thank you, Mr. Premier and members, for being here. It's very much an honour to have you here today. I think it's important for a lot of us to see what the challenges are going to be and how the committee can help, hopefully, in the future as well.

I noted with interest your infrastructure projects. Where I come from in the deep south, so to speak, we have a new bridge process going on and I understand the difficulty of trying to get things done. I've been trying to get a new bridge for a number of years. We have about $1 billion of trade going through my riding. Basically it happens along two kilometres, and this is per day that it takes place, in culmination, depending on what's actually being transported. Despite that magnitude, to get a project going has been difficult for a lot of different reasons. We are moving forward, thankfully for that.

In terms of your projects that you mentioned here, the government has talked about an infrastructure bank and public-private partnerships. I'll be quite frank; I'm biased against them. I look at what we're doing and the new border crossing that we have. You're building a layer of profit in there, especially given the fact that for other border crossings we've actually done grants and bonds, especially when we do them bi-nationally with the Americans, and can raise the funds in a more cost-effective way and pay dividends to citizens. However, in your situation, what are the pros and cons?

I have no agenda within that question. I just think you should know what I feel on it. Does that lend any opportunities or does it create other complications in looking at that model for these types of projects?

4:05 p.m.

Deputy Premier, Minister of Environment and Natural Resources, Minister of Finance, and Minister of Human Resources, Government of the Northwest Territories

Robert C. McLeod

Thank you.

We have a couple of P3 projects that we're working on right now. We have the Stanton Territorial Hospital renewal project. The Mackenzie Valley fibre line project is another P3 project.

We find that process works fairly well for us because the risk is actually on the proponent. We just book the money and then pay them when the project is done. It has helped us, actually, on the Mackenzie Valley fibre optic line, as in my earlier comments I spoke to the situation that we ran into.

If it were a government-backed project, first of all the price would probably be higher, because anytime you have a GNWT sticker on it, the price goes up.

4:05 p.m.

NDP

Brian Masse NDP Windsor West, ON

Fair enough. That's why I'm asking the question.

4:05 p.m.

Deputy Premier, Minister of Environment and Natural Resources, Minister of Finance, and Minister of Human Resources, Government of the Northwest Territories

Robert C. McLeod

Yes, the price goes up. When you have a GNWT or Canada sticker on it, the price does go up.

In this particular case, because they assumed all the risk, they had to try to remediate the problem, which was good for us. We'll take over the project when we're satisfied that it's going to meet our standards.

The Stanton Territorial Hospital renewal project, a $350-million hospital that they're building in Yellowknife, is a territorial hospital that is almost twice the size of the old one. We have a P3 partner with that, too, and it's the same principle. They take all the risk. We have some other conditions built into it that make it a little easier to get P3 partners, but we find that's probably the way to go in our particular case.

4:05 p.m.

NDP

Brian Masse NDP Windsor West, ON

With that, is it a long-term agreement, or is it a user fee type of thing? What is the private sector partner getting out of this? I know it can depend on the agreement, but what is the best for your scenarios, or maybe they're different for each one?

We had a private sector involved in creating our parkway—leading to it—and they got caught. They actually had to dig 250 girders out of the ground, and another 250 were destroyed, for an infrastructure project. However, they did assume the risk because they were doing it illegally. It's now in the courts and so forth. It was crazy. They didn't weld them to Canadian standards. You can't make this stuff up. I only found out because at the gym I go to, some of the guys were actually pouring the welds. They were welding the welds in the cement. They actually had bottles and so forth inside of it. It was just unbelievable. At any rate, they're accountable at the end of the day in the courts.

However, what works? Is it a user fee? Is it a long-term cost association? Do they get to keep it? With the border project I'm talking about here, they're going to get to keep the border for 50 years.

4:05 p.m.

Deputy Premier, Minister of Environment and Natural Resources, Minister of Finance, and Minister of Human Resources, Government of the Northwest Territories

Robert C. McLeod

In the case of the stand-alone project, they're getting to use the old hospital, I think.

Maybe I'll let the health minister respond. We just look after the money.

4:05 p.m.

NDP

Brian Masse NDP Windsor West, ON

We can always follow up, too. I'm just curious as to what works for you.