Your presentation covered a lot of ground. I'd like to focus on the question of taxation.
Let me first say that this is our first opportunity to appear before a committee to present the work the coalition is doing, and I hope it won't be the last. It's all part of the way in which an industry is run. Since we've reached the stage where we're becoming more vocal, you're going to hear a lot more about us in the years ahead.
The issue of how the geothermal energy sector is taxed is somewhat more complex because the greatest potential identified for the short term is the renewal of heating plants in Canada's industrial sector, particularly in Quebec and in Ontario. The institutional sector presents no special interest from a taxation standpoint. Therefore, no special attention has been paid to it, for obvious reasons.
We are very pleased to see that geothermal energy has been included in the new tax provisions. Now, at least, the industrial or manufacturing side of things is covered. We can't complain and we are extremely pleased. Our challenge is to determine how we can influence energy policies to promote the more rapid expansion of geothermal energy in sectors that traditionally, do not come under federal jurisdiction, notably the institutional sector which includes hospitals, schools and so forth. I admit that there is a tremendous amount of work still to do.
In terms of buildings, in my opinion, every building in Canada should indeed be heated and cooled through the use of geothermal energy. Where there is sufficient land available, this option would work for most buildings. However, the use of geothermal energy is precluded by certain geological conditions.
Before we go overboard promoting one particular form of energy, whether it be nuclear or geothermal energy, in my humble opinion, we should start by the building sector. If we continue to put up buildings that are improperly constructed or poorly insulated, what good will it do to install a geothermal heating and cooling system, when the cold winter air can creep in?
With your permission, I'd like to go back five years in time. Four or five years ago, I was working for the Association québécoise pour la maîtrise de l'énergie. As you well know, this association is involved in promoting energy efficiency. We made a presentation at the time to the Conference of Ministers of Energy and Mines in Halifax asking to have revived the famous National Energy Code for Buildings, which called for the construction of energy efficient buildings.
This particular code was developed in 1995 but has not been adopted by any one government. The idea was revived four or five years ago and it has now become a priority for Canada. The question is whether the federal and provincial governments will finally agree to put in place a building code in order to construct more energy efficient buildings.
That's the fundamental question we need to ask ourselves before we even get to the question of what system to install in these buildings to better heat them. My starting position is that all homes should meet the R-2000 standard. Then we could go on to develop a geothermal energy system that would be twice as compact, two or three times more cost- effective and capable of producing all of the energy people need.