I would like to thank all the witnesses for being with us today.
My mother always told me: "Nothing is lost, nothing is created, everything is transformed." What is created on planet Earth therefore stays on planet Earth and is recycled—or so we hope, in any event.
I was the mayor of La Pocatière for four years, from 2005 to 2009. During those years, the Government of Quebec announced a policy calling for all biodegradable material to be recycled or transformed.
That said, 18 years later, 50 per cent of that material is being recycled or transformed. Initially, the deadline was 2015, which was then pushed back to 2020. Today, the target date is 2025. It might even get pushed back to 2030 or 2035.
So at the time, new objectives were set. However, as set out in the document entitled "Greening Government Strategy: A Government of Canada Directive," the Government of Canada committed to diverting at least 75 per cent by weight of plastic waste from landfills by 2030. That is six and a half years from now.
I asked my friend ChatGPT to get me some data. According to that controversial robot, in 2019, in Quebec alone, ten per cent of plastic material was recycled.
I am ordinarily a very optimistic man, but would it be a bit too optimistic to think we will be able to recycle 75 per cent of plastic material in Canada by 2025?
This is 2023, I would remind you. So that is in two years. Personally, I think it is impossible.
So what would be a genuine, realistic strategy?
I repeat: 2030 is in six years. I don't believe that in six years we will be recycling 75 per cent of all plastic in Canada—not because I don't want that to be true, but because we have to be realistic. There are technologies now that allow plastic to be recycled and transformed back into oil. Obviously, we will be inviting a lot of witnesses over the coming weeks and months in order to do this study, which will be extremely interesting.
I have a business myself, and in my print shop, which has about 20 employees, we recycle 95 per cent of all inputs, and have done for over 20 years. We were the first printing plant in Quebec to be recognized by RECYC-QUÉBEC for recycling 90 per cent or more of its materials. It is doable, but it takes a lot of energy to get there.
Is Canada really capable of recycling 75 per cent of plastic products by six years from now? The question answers itself, but I am asking you all the same.