Good morning, and thank you, Mr. Chair.
I have with me this morning Mr. Jim Farrell, the assistant deputy minister responsible for the Canadian Forest Service. He will be joining me in answering your questions after my presentation.
It's a pleasure to appear before the Standing Committee on Natural Resources, and I welcome the opportunity to discuss the contribution that Natural Resources Canada is making to the long-term competitiveness and sustainability of the forest sector.
Mr. Chair, I won't read the entire statement but rather I will highlight some key sections in order to allow more time for questions. Also, with your permission, Mr. Chair, when we turn to the second discussion on the Chalk River situation, I would like to provide just a very short update before moving into questions.
So to start, there is no doubt that Canada's forest sector is a major contributor to Canada's economy. Our vast natural forest endowment has sustained a global-scale forest industry. In hundreds of rural communities across Canada it provides employment in high-paid jobs. We are the world's largest exporter of softwood lumber, pulp, and newsprint. In 2006 the sector contributed $36 billion to Canada's GDP and it constituted 10% of our overall exports.
Despite this, the forest sector faces serious challenges, with significant growth of new, low-cost competitors, a declining demand for newsprint in North America, and limited capital investment due to poor profitability. More recently, the collapse of the U.S. housing market, higher energy prices, and a strong Canadian dollar have accelerated large-scale structural adjustment of the industry, resulting in mergers and mill closures.
With the subprime mortgage crisis, American housing starts have declined 26% in 2007 and close to a 25% decline in Canada's wood products has been experienced in our exports to the U.S. We've also seen major price decreases, largely due to the high Canadian dollar. The result is reduced production and the closure of a number of facilities, job losses of close to 30,000, and the likelihood of more layoffs in the future, all of which signal the need for a transformation in this sector.
So what's needed? The future health of Canada's forest sector depends on innovation. We need to find new uses for wood fibre, products characterized by higher value rather than higher volume. Investing in innovation, emerging technologies, and new products have the potential to lead a transformation in the forest sector in Canada.
I want to turn now to actions under way at Natural Resources Canada. We have in the department been leading a long-term competitiveness agenda, working with all forest sector stakeholders, research institutes, academia, industry specialists, and provincial governments. Last year the $127.5 million forest industry long-term competitiveness strategy was initiated. Innovation is the key to this strategy.
The central thrust is to consolidate a number of separate pieces of the national forest innovation system and align them to focus on competitiveness. This has led to the creation of the world's largest public-private partnership in research and development—FPInnovations—with world-class R and D capacity in the fields of pulp and paper and wood products transportation. Some 20% of its resources are dedicated to transformative technology, including bioproducts, nanotechnologies, and next-generation pulp and papers.
FPInnovations is the flagship of our competitiveness strategy, but we have a number of other initiatives under way in the department. The Canadian Wood Fibre Centre was created to generate value from Canada's forest fibre. We're working with the forest industry and with provinces on expanding Canada's overseas markets through the Canada wood export program, which is aimed at raising the profile of Canadian wood products offshore and increasing wood exports to new markets such as China and South Korea.
Here at home, NRCan is helping to develop the non-residential wood construction market in North America, one that is valued at up to $25 billion annually. We're working with small to medium-sized enterprises in our Value to Wood program, promoting the transfer of technology from research institutes to the work floors of the secondary manufacturing wood industry.
The department is also working to increase international awareness and acceptance of Canadian sustainable forest products. The international forestry partnership program is providing information abroad on Canada's sustainable forest management practices.
Canada's forest ecosystems have always been subject to the cycles of change created by pest infestations and wildfire, and the department has a very long and proud history of undertaking forest science.
In response to the current mountain pine beetle infestation, the Government of Canada has provided $200 million to mitigate the impacts and help control the spread of the pest. We are working closely with B.C. and Alberta to assess risk and address target efforts to reducing the eastward spread. Indications are that these efforts, along with an exceptionally cold winter, are having an impact.
Of course, an ongoing concern is the increased risk of wildfire. That is particularly the case for communities in infested areas. So we are working with first nations and communities in B.C. on strategies to mitigate this risk, both on reserves and on crown land that surrounds them.
Mr. Chair, to conclude, although our forest sector is facing challenges, it still has a tremendous potential for future success. The global and domestic restructuring of the forest industry will continue. NRCan is working with its many provincial or territorial and industry partners to support the transformation of Canada's forest sector, with a focus on innovation, higher-value uses of fibre, biomaterials, the inclusion of new players in the industry, and opening up new market opportunities.
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair. Jim and I will be very happy to respond to your questions.