Thank you, Chair.
Colleagues, I know today we're considering committee business, so I want to put something else on the floor here for our consideration as a committee.
I'm going to move the following motion. I'll read it into the record, and we will provide it in both official languages by email in just a moment. It reads:
Given that governments have an economic and social incentive to act on climate change;
Given that climate change could lead to devastating impacts on Canadian businesses and industry, with climate damages and economic losses of up to 35 billion dollars per year by 2030, and $865 billion by 2100 or six times the revenues of Canada's most populous provinces, in the absence of climate action;
Given that the energy, forestry, mining, agricultural and fisheries sectors will be particularly affected, putting many local economies at risk, given these sectors contribute to the economies of hundreds of municipalities and communities across the country;
Given that climate change, in turn, may impact labour markets, employment and wage growth, particularly in the absence of climate action, and;
That industry supports industrial carbon pricing as the backbone of decarbonization across the country, spurring growth, especially in lower intensive sectors of the economy, job growth and greener projects, and; that industry has called on governments to work together to strengthen Canada's industrial pricing system;
That the committee allocate no less than two meetings to study the topic of industrial carbon pricing, as well as the broader industrial and labour market impacts of climate change.
That's the motion. I'm just going to speak to it briefly.
This letter, I believe, was tabled with the committee on October 23, 2024. It's from some of our very large industrial producers. The Canadian Manufacturers & Exporters was a signatory to the letter, as were the Canadian Steel Producers Association; Alberta's Industrial Heartland, the capital investment destination; Carbon Removal Canada; the Canadian Renewable Energy Association; the Cement Association of Canada; the Chemistry Industry Association of Canada; Lafarge; Clean Prosperity, and the list goes on.
It's important for us to consider this as a topic of study. It's clear to me that the coalition of industry players here is calling on us, as well as provincial governments, to work together to strengthen our industrial carbon pricing system in Canada, which has its challenges.
If you read the letter that they've put forward, you see there are quite a number of barriers that are created by the patchwork of systems that we have across each province and territory. Perhaps I won't go into more depth on that, because there's more information, but I'm sure that if the committee decides to study this, we'll get a chance to look at what specifically those trade barriers and misalignments are, and what impacts they have on a strong industrial carbon pricing system in Canada.
I think this is an area where the federal government can help to eliminate barriers and red tape by working closely with provinces and territories. I think that's an exciting prospect for us here at this committee. We can undertake some work to look at that and say, “Okay, what could we recommend that would be helpful?” This group has called upon governments at all levels to look at this and to work together, so I think it's incumbent upon us to respond to their request. It's an important call from industry.
We also know from the Canadian Climate Institute's work that two-thirds of emissions reductions will be led by industry in this country—that's 66% of all the emissions reductions in this country. It's found that industrial carbon pricing will be the top driver of emissions reductions between now and 2030. Industrial carbon pricing will do more than any other policy to cut Canada's emissions. The large emitter trading system that is in place already is the single biggest driver of emissions reductions.
I will note that, recently, the journal Science published an article that was a very in-depth study. It's probably the most comprehensive study that has been done on climate policies and the intersection of those policies or the mixture of those policies. They looked at 1,500 different policies across 43 jurisdictions around the world and looked at 20 years' worth of data, and they were able to isolate and show that the most successful policy mixtures for emissions reductions included carbon pricing or pricing instruments and mechanisms, as well as incentives and regulation.
I would say Canada has all three, which is a good thing. We have the right policy mixture in Canada, but we have this misalignment across provinces and territories in terms of the system that we have. We need to work together to figure out a path for addressing the concerns that our industry associations and representatives are asking us to look at.
What hangs in the balance here is really how fast we can decarbonize and how much we can mitigate the risks of climate change as we move forward, which are very costly, as we know. Just this year, it's estimated that there will be $25 billion in damages and losses due to climate change, which is half of projected GDP growth. That's not insignificant. Imagine half of our projected GDP growth going to just cover the costs of the damages of climate change and the productivity losses.
There is significant impact here that I think we need to be aware of. We can't put our hands over our eyes and pretend this is going to go away. It's not. I really think this committee can do some deeper-dive work on a study. We're seeing no fewer than two meetings. I honestly think this will require more than two meetings, of course, and I would be happy to study it for longer.
Maybe I'll speak more to this if we have more time for debate on this, which I imagine we might, but we'll see what the other committee members have to say about this.
Thanks.