Thank you very much, Madam Chair.
Good morning to all the committee members. It's a real pleasure to be here today to assist you with your important work and, through your work at the committee, it's always an honour to speak to Canadians from coast to coast to coast.
Ensuring a level playing field for Canada's auto manufacturing sector and its workers, including the emerging electric vehicle sector and its related supply chains, is a priority for me and for my government. We're at a pivotal moment for global trade as we navigate the transition to a green economy. From technological advances reshaping industries to shifts in global supply chains, the move towards a sustainable zero-emissions future is reshaping our economic landscape. This is a critical inflection point, when the decisions we make will shape the future of our planet and our economy. Electric vehicles and their supply chains are a key piece of that global shift towards a net-zero economy, and this is a strategic sector and one that is critical to Canada and to Canadian workers.
Canada's auto manufacturing industry supports over 500,000 good-paying Canadian jobs, many of which are unionized, and our EV supply chain has the potential to be ranked first in the world. Unfortunately, Canada's EV sector and its workers are facing acute threats from unfair competition from China, which is why our government made the necessary decision to address this threat head-on.
Since 2015 the Government of Canada has invested over $120 billion in climate action and clean growth. By focusing on innovation and green jobs, and by working with like-minded partners, Canada will build a more resilient, sustainable and competitive economy. Canada has the raw materials, expertise, energy and skilled workforce required to pursue these goals and to help lead the global transition to a net-zero economy.
To meet the challenges and, indeed, to seize the opportunities, the government is working hard to attract investments in EV manufacturing and its related supply chains. These efforts already provided real returns, with major investments by leaders such as Stellantis, GM, Honda, Volkswagen, NextStar and Northvolt, attracting over 44 billion dollars' worth of investment to expand Canada's EV production capacity along the supply chain.
These investments, combined with existing government incentives for people who buy EVs, will play an important role in building Canada's clean economy and in securing long-term opportunities for workers in the sector. These investments will provide generational opportunities for Canadian workers by promoting growth, anchoring supply chains, maintaining Canada's key role in an integrated North American auto sector and supporting a shift to the net-zero economy.
However, Canada's competitiveness is at risk of being seriously undermined due to unfair competition from China.
Chinese manufacturers, which benefit from non-market policies and practices, heavily tilted the playing field in China's favour and led to a significant overcapacity in EV production. China's policies included pervasive subsidization, insufficient labour and environmental standards and other measures that artificially lower production costs. As a result of these unfair advantages, China's global EV exports have grown exponentially, distorting global trade and preventing fair competition. These practices hurt not only our workers and our economies but global trade and security more broadly. They are also undermining the multilateral trading system and the WTO rules, which were not designed for challenges of this nature. This is a matter of concern across the economic sectors that affect us all.
Canada's not alone in responding to China's non-market policies and practices. Several other trading nations have taken measures to defend their industries from Chinese overcapacity. On September 27, the United States increased section 301 tariffs on EVs, steel, aluminum, EV batteries, critical minerals, solar products and other goods imported from China. On October 4, the EU member states voted to impose countervailing duties on Chinese EVs on a definitive basis.
Canada must not become a destination to dump Chinese exports diverted from other markets. During our consultations in July, Canadian industry and our workers confirmed that exceptional measures were required to address this extraordinary threat and to defend our economic security. It's why Canada announced a series of exceptional measures on imports from China to protect our emerging EV sector and the related supply chains. These include a 100% surtax on Chinese EVs, effective October 1; a surtax of 25% on Chinese steel and aluminum, effective tomorrow; a consultation on potential surtaxes on imports, from Chinese batteries to battery parts, semiconductors, solar products and critical mineral products; and Chinese EVs and EV chargers are no longer eligible for Canada's incentive programs.
We fully support the multilateral rules-based system and believe that a strong, multilateral set of rules is the best long-term approach to effectively address trade-distortive measures, and that the WTO has to have an essential role to play in ensuring a level playing field. Canada's goal is to have even stronger international rules that better address these policies and practices, which are at odds with a fair and open market-based trading system.
Madam Chair, we stand firmly with Canadian businesses and workers and will continue to protect them from the challenges posed by unfair trade practices. For too long, past trade policies overlooked the environment, labour rights and the inclusion of SMEs, women-owned businesses, indigenous peoples and others who have historically been under-represented in our economy. We can no longer afford trade policies that ignore climate change and are not inclusive.
We must invest in our communities and celebrate our successes if we're going to emerge as the economic leaders of the 21st century, and I truly believe we are in a strong position to do so. We need to face our challenges head-on and respond with ambition. Confident countries invest in themselves and their people, and that's exactly what our government is doing. That's what we're focused on.
I'm more optimistic than ever about Canada's ability to meet the moment.
Thank you.