Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Good afternoon. I am Jerry Staples, vice-president of air service, marketing and development for the Halifax Stanfield International Airport Authority.
Tom Ruth, our president and CEO, sends his regrets and greetings. He is unable to be here because of schedule conflicts.
I'll give you a bit of background. On October 25, the airport authority went out with a news release with the headline “Airport Authority Applauds CETA”. We support this program, primarily because of our strategic objectives to grow cargo, air cargo.
Further to Peter's comments, lobster is a huge, important commodity for us at Halifax. In fact, lobster accounts for 80% of what's moving as air freight. It's a high-value, dense product and the carriers like that.
We have target markets, which are in Europe. Frankfurt is one of them. We currently enjoy service with Air Canada and Cargojet: Cargojet to Europe, Air Canada to London Heathrow daily. It's a passenger aircraft, a 767 aircraft, that has belly capacity. I point that out because with airlines operating under very thin margins, the ability to haul cargo can be the top-up that makes them profitable and allows us to sustain the passenger activity.
We also have demand for dedicated freighter aircraft, which is the Cargojet I referenced, an all-Canadian—the only all-Canadian—cargo operator with dedicated freighters and with international service. We enjoy their business at Halifax.
Working with them and other carriers, there's an opportunity to grow as lobster and other seafood commodities.... These are in fact commodities such as silver hake, which as a species is not eaten in this market, but for which there is demand in Europe. So we see opportunities there. This is very well aligned with what we have been pursuing for our strategic objectives.
In fact, we processed 29.5 million kilograms of cargo in 2012. We look at doubling that over the next five years.
Although there are unknowns with the CETA agreement, we will do our homework and our research and work with industry partners to get that supply to move by air. We have that capacity, and it's a reasonable expectation to double.
We've made an investment. The airport authority, along with private companies, Gateway Facilities Inc. built the common-use cargo facility. I'm suspecting most of you will be departing by air, and as you approach the airport, you'll see that facility on your right as you exit the main highway. That facility is a 40,000-square-foot facility, with 7,000 square feet of climate-controlled space. When that was built, it was a bit of a chicken-and-egg situation to accommodate better handling of the cargo, the perishable products.
Actually, north of Miami, with direct airside access, that is the largest and most modern efficient facility that exists. It's a hugely important asset for us.
Just about a year ago, actually it was mid-November 2012, we brought online the runway extension of 10,500 feet. We thank the federal investment and provincial investment that helped us make that possible. But the sole reason we did that was not for passenger activity; it was to align with our cargo strategy. A wide-body heavy aircraft needs that extra length to go out fully loaded.
So, again, those are two key pieces of infrastructure that are in place at this point.
There's more in my speaking notes. Basically, the airport is an economic generator. We're doing over $1.27 billion in terms of economic impact. Passenger and cargo clients have access to markets across Canada, the U.S., the Caribbean, and Europe. It's a 24/7 operation, with no noise restrictions. That's key, and that's a huge part of our value proposition, because as we look at CETA coming online and we see our competitors in the U.S.—basically Boston and the New York airports, Newark and JFK—those airports have noise restrictions. So after a certain point in time, usually somewhere just before or at midnight, those airports shut down, plus they are very congested airports. That's not the case in Halifax. We're wide open 24/7, with customs service, which creates a huge advantage.
Cargo has to move in two directions on aircraft, so we've been in the unique position at Halifax of having an imbalance, in that most airports in North America are importing, are net importers, and we're net exporters. Again, it's the seafood. One of the things we see as a possibility is repatriating some of this import activity that's arriving at Boston and New York for North American markets, bringing it through Canada, and putting it on trucks or moving it further by air into major markets within 13 or 18 hours, thereby creating jobs and increasing the tax base for the enjoyment of Canadians.
We're a world-class airport. Our mission statement is quite clear: “a world-class airport creating prosperity for our region by connecting Atlantic Canada to the world through flight”. We've been focused on growing the air service, as I said, on the cargo side, but it's important to remember that the cargo will sustain the growth on the passenger side. We are really focused on two key things.
I think you heard from Joyce Carter and Nancy Phillips from the Halifax Gateway Council yesterday. I was able to participate in that recent mission. We focused on the CETA announcement, which, coincidentally, coincided with our planned trip to Europe. The $115 billion in megaprojects that are on the books for Atlantic Canada were very well received, but from my perspective, there's a huge opportunity, an obligation on some of our parts, to get this message out in Europe. It's just not as high up on the radar as it needs to be, in my opinion.
The elimination of tariffs on fresh commodities like live seafood is going to boost our cargo demand. We see a very strong upside. This, combined with the elimination on forestry and fresh agrifood products such as blueberries, bodes very well for us at Halifax International. After all, if you look at Oxford, Nova Scotia, it is the blueberry capital of Canada.
The workforce movement component is equally important to us. When you're looking at the $115 billion worth of megaprojects on the books, the actual horsepower, if you will, does not exist in Atlantic Canada to deliver on all those projects, so it's probably going to mean, from a skilled labour perspective and on the professional side, that people will have to come in from other countries to work this coast . We see that in the CETA agreement. Again, that hasn't unfolded yet, but we see what the intent is, I guess, and we look at that positively.
These early days are critical, again, to enhance the awareness of CETA. We'd like to be part of that, in particular, in the European markets. I guess I would add also on the European side that as we become successful at attracting more cargo capacity to Europe, these aircraft have the ability to move beyond. If you're looking at Frankfurt, which is a destination high up in our strategic priorities, the connections that would give us to Asia, the Middle East, and Africa would be huge. That's also possible through other major centres. While the finer details of the agreement will be worked through, we're going to need to focus on quantifying the potential for ourselves and the positive economic impacts that it will bring.
With regard to aligning the administrative interpretation among the various government departments, it has been our experience with the Canada-EU Blue Sky agreement or Open Skies, if you will, that there were several departments involved in making that possible. These are early days, and I would ask that consideration be given to coordinating the various departments, be they Finance or DFAIT, as I still call it—I understand the acronym has changed recently. The various departments that have legislation and regulations they have to administer and interpret need to be talking together sooner to avoid becoming an impediment to implementation, because in some cases I see two years in this document, and five or six years in other cases, depending on what aspect you're looking at. From an administrative perspective, that can go off the rails quite easily. It has gone off the rails in the past. We'd encourage you to look at that.
Thank you for the opportunity to share a few thoughts.