Thank you very much.
It's truly an honour to be here this morning. I would like to thank you for the opportunity to speak with you about the Canadian nuclear industry, specifically the CANDU Owners Group, also known as COG.
Today I will explain who we are and tell you about our work, which is done in collaboration with our members, the operators of CANDU nuclear plants worldwide, including Canadian operators such as Bruce Power, New Brunswick Power, and Ontario Power Generation. I will give you some context on the value of this work, not only for our members in the industry but for Canadians as a whole.
COG is a not-for-profit organization entirely funded by its members, the operators of CANDU reactors worldwide. Our sole focus at COG is to continuously improve performance through collaborative knowledge sharing, research, and development activities. Simply put, our vision is to achieve CANDU excellence through collaboration. The goal is to sustain safe, clean, reliable, and affordable electricity for the millions of citizens worldwide who rely on our technology, including more than 14 million Canadians in Ontario and New Brunswick, who get much of their power from CANDU stations.
COG's activities result in an investment of more than $65 million in R and D annually. According to the European Commission Joint Research Centre's annual global ranking, this amount is equal to the R and D investment of a top-15 Canadian private company. It is a direct contribution to the economy, and to spin-off research and development activity in Canada in the public, private, and education sectors.
In regard to the education sector, working with the University Network of Excellence in Nuclear Engineering, or UNENE, COG invests about three-quarters of a million dollars annually on collaborative research projects with Canadian universities. Perhaps the most exciting part of this investment is the outcome of the research: a safe, clean, dependable, and affordable baseload electricity source, free of greenhouse gas emissions. This improves our quality of life and provides a low-carbon electricity source to address the threat of climate change.
With our members, COG has made great strides in the improvement of safety and performance in CANDU plants worldwide. In addition to pooling their financial resources, our members share the time and knowledge of their top engineers, scientists, operators, and maintainers. They work in teams alongside experts from COG and from companies like AMEC, Canadian Nuclear Laboratories, Kinectrics, SNC-Lavalin, and S.N. Stern Laboratories, to name just a few, all part of today's knowledge economy. They achieve together more than any single company could achieve on its own. That is the power of collaboration, and that is the strength of COG.
Here are a few examples of the results our members have accomplished together, and the research and knowledge-sharing programs COG facilitates.
A good place to start is with our post-Fukushima response, whose aim was to ensure our CANDU stations, and our people, are positioned to respond to highly improbable events well beyond those we envisioned when we designed and built the plants. Aligned with the requirements outlined by the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission, ours was one of the most comprehensive and consistent responses worldwide.
On a personal note, I was directly involved in these initiatives. To see our nuclear plants successfully implement a strong response to Fukushima, and to help lead the world in that response, was a highlight of my career.
As well, through COG's R and D and joint project programs, our members have also extended the life of critical plant components, resulting in longer and safer plant operating life. This has saved billions of dollars, improved operating safety, and also reduced environmental impact by deferring the need for new generation. It has also enabled OPG and Bruce Power to adjust their project schedules to minimize the number of units that are shut down and are undergoing refurbishment and major component replacement at the same time.
Our research and development has also improved safety margins on operating equipment, which not only improves safety in a very fundamental way but also helps to improve revenue generation, thereby reducing the cost on a per-megawatt basis. It also has improved practices and programs to further reduce the environmental impact of our operations. This includes mitigation for impingement and entrainment of fish in the Great Lakes and improvements to spawning grounds.
Working together, our members have strengthened human performance and operator knowledge in safety and reliability. They have collaborated to develop new processes and techniques for better outcomes on everyday activities as well as unplanned events. The result is some of the best plant performances year over year in the history of our nuclear stations, even as they have moved into the later phases of life. For example, Bruce Power's 40-year-old refurbished units 2 and 4 reactors sustained 99.5% and 88.4% capability factors last year. Pickering unit 4, which began operation in 1971, achieved a 97.3% capability factor last year. These are excellent results that compare well with much younger units and reflect our ability to get more out of plant assets as our understanding of operations and maintenance has evolved.
Darlington, as the fleet's newest plant, has benefited most from that knowledge and research, because everything we learned from the earlier plants was applied to Darlington even sooner in its life cycle, which sets it up for strong performance post-refurbishment.
Through hundreds of shared initiatives, COG has provided the technical and experimental basis from which our members implement programs and plant changes. The billions of dollars in savings is an excellent return on their investment in both financial and human terms.
I'm now going to step back and provide a bit more context on the foundation of our organization. COG was formed 32 years ago, in 1984, by the Canadian nuclear operators, all of whom operated plants with made-in-Canada CANDU technology. Two years later, the first of COG's international members, also CANDU operators, joined and were followed by others. Today our international members include CANDU and pressurized heavy water reactor operators in Argentina, Romania, Korea, China, Pakistan, and India. In fact, every utility worldwide operating one of these reactors is a member of COG, and these reactors account for more than 10% of all power reactors worldwide. We should take pride in seeing this unique, made-in-Canada technology used extensively and successfully throughout the world.
COG's international aspect allows for further cost sharing, which means our Canadian plants benefit from research jointly funded by the international community. The international members bring diverse perspectives from operating their plants within different cultures and from vantage points that may differ from our Canadian perspective. This strengthens us and lifts our eyes to challenges and opportunities for innovation that we may not otherwise have considered.
This also provides COG the opportunity to share the strengths of our Canadian experience in areas of the world still developing nuclear capacity, including in the areas of nuclear safety and safety culture. The world is small, and a nuclear event anywhere has a ripple effect everywhere. By helping to strengthen our international partners in their operations, we also strengthen nuclear's reputation here at home.
We are also building bench strength through supplier participants. In collaboration with the Organization of Canadian Nuclear Industries, we have connected operators and suppliers in a dialogue to improve safety and reliability right through the supply chain. This includes in the plant, where suppliers are working more closely with operators than ever before. In particular, we have focused efforts on preparing suppliers for the refurbishment at OPG's Darlington station and for the major component replacement projects at Bruce Power.
COG is an entry point for its members to interact with many organizations worldwide. Our collaboration agreements with industry organizations here in Canada and globally have led to award-winning partnerships as well as stronger policy at both the national and global level.
When we talk about the future of nuclear, we can and should look to new technologies. We can also continue to rely on the ones serving us well today. The Darlington, Bruce, and Point Lepreau plants can provide safe, clean, affordable, and predictable power for generations of Canadians to come.
In closing, COG's mission is to improve performance through collaboration. The goal, always, is continuous improvement through both the human and technical performance of our operating stations. COG's role is to help our members better operate their nuclear plants, achieve stronger human performance, and ultimately build a foundation for public trust.
Thank you for your interest in the future of nuclear and for giving me the opportunity to share with you COG's role in shaping its future.