Good morning, Madam Chair. Thank you for inviting us.
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen members of the Canadian Parliament. Thank you for your interest in our aluminum industry. I am here to talk to you about it.
I am from Saguenay—Lac-Saint-Jean and I am the president of an economic research firm. Saguenay has the largest concentration of aluminum plants in the world. In a 50-kilometre radius, we have five aluminum plants, and they produce more than 1 million of the 3 million tonnes of aluminum produced by Canada. Canada is third globally among aluminum producers. In addition, our aluminum is the best, the cheapest, and it has the smallest carbon footprint in the world.
We have a large corporation, Rio Tinto, Alcan's successor. In 2007, Rio Tinto purchased Alcan, which had projects in Saguenay—Lac-Saint-Jean, including project AP-60 and the one focusing on completing the construction of an aluminum plant in Alma. Rio Tinto, as a trustee, is continuing the work in terms of commitments to carry out those projects. In July 2019, as the agreement with Alcan was to expire in 2020, Rio Tinto extended the agreement to 2025, giving itself until then to carry out those two projects. In fact, the corporation announced $300 million in investments related to those two projects—the one in Alma and the AP-60 plant. However, three months later, in October, in a dramatic turn of events, Rio Tinto told us that, in light of the new free trade agreement and the new provisions on aluminum, it would put those $300-million projects on hold.
We are working on this, but we are not alone. Rio Tinto and engineers are also working on it. These are large, high-quality projects that were developed over several years. Hundreds of millions of dollars have been invested in them to produce the best aluminum possible. However, owing to a CUSMA provision you are familiar with—the one on rules of origin, which means that aluminum is not treated the same as steel—we are losing our access to the U.S. market.
There are aluminum plants in the city of Saguenay. In the town of Alma, aluminum workers from Unifor and from the United Steelworkers, which represent plant workers, as well as Aluminium Valley Society, which represents the 4,000 individuals working in some 100 businesses involved in the broader aluminum industry, came together to fund a study to assess what would happen if CUSMA remained in its current form. The result is that it would put on hold the development of projects that could produce 850,000 tonnes of new aluminum that would be extremely beneficial in terms of greenhouse gas emissions.
The production of one tonne of Quebec or Canadian aluminum generates two tonnes of greenhouse gas, compared with 18 tonnes of greenhouse gas for each tonne of Chinese aluminum. Our aluminum production generates the lowest gas emissions in the world, as it is based on hydroelectricity in British Columbia and in Quebec.
The projects I mentioned would produce 850,000 tonnes of aluminum and would generate $6.2 billion in investment in Quebec in previously announced projects. An expansion project is planned at Aluminerie Alouette, which has invested $50 million in a prefeasibility study, but the study has been put on hold because of the new provision. The two projects that were already announced in Saguenay have been put on hold. The industry is very worried by that.
The world is complex—I don't have to explain this to you, as you work on complex files—and this industry is capable of managing the complex world it is part of. However, this new provision creates complete uncertainty in terms of the entry of any aluminum into the world going through Mexico. In fact, the current provision enables any aluminum to enter Mexico and to be considered as North American aluminum.
We already have an industry that employs 80,000 people in Quebec, and the projects underway could generate $1 billion in additional spending per year, without taking into account the $6 billion for the construction. They would generate 3,000 new entry-level jobs at an annual salary of about $80,000 each. This is an extremely important industry. So here is the straw that will break the camel's back.
The association president came here and told you that he supported the agreement reluctantly. He was saying that, at least, there was an agreement. Afterwards, he told you about a dozen elements that were missing from the agreement. They are extremely worried and they are putting projects on hold. So it is in the national interest to resolve this issue and to close this door.
Believe me, we are open to the world. We are a country that is involved in trade; that is clear. Our trade with the French, the British and the Americans has enriched us. We are for trade, but for fair trade. We are from North America, where there are companies. Let's take aluminum for example. Alcoa, the oldest aluminum company in the world is a company. Rio Tinto is a company. However, in the rest of the world, aluminum is not produced by companies, but rather by governments with legitimate political interests.
In Brazil, in India and in China, governments are using aluminum to create jobs, and they are dropping prices. They are dumping. We have affordable aluminum; they have political aluminum. If you let that aluminum in, there is no doubt that our industry will be unable to compete with a government like that of Dubai that will reduce prices.
That is why it is in the national interest to regulate the access of illegitimate aluminum to the North American market, as stated by the president of the Aluminum Association of Canada. We also support that proposal.