Thank you, Mr. Chair.
It is my pleasure to be here today, to appear before the committee on behalf of Cameco once again, as your study examines the important role of the Canadian nuclear sector and the role it plays in our economy through trade, manufacturing and processing, and high-quality employment; addressing climate change and the transition to cleaner energy; and the advancement of nuclear science and technology, innovation, and research and development.
Cameco firmly believes that a strong natural resource sector that includes a strong and growing nuclear sector will continue to provide a stable foundation for ongoing growth and prosperity for all Canadians. As one of the country's leading sustainable resource developers, Canada's largest industrial employer of aboriginal people, and a major contributor to low-carbon technologies that address climate change, Cameco is proud to be a leader in Canada's nuclear sector.
Based in Saskatoon, Cameco is a significant player in the global uranium market and accounts for just under 20% of total global uranium production. Our portfolio in northern Saskatchewan includes the top two uranium-producing mines in the world, at McArthur River and Cigar Lake. We also maintain production sites in the United States and Kazakhstan, and development opportunities in Australia.
However, Cameco is much more than a mining company. We operate all along the nuclear value chain. Cameco owns uranium refining, conversion, and fuel fabrication facilities in Blind River, Port Hope, and Cobourg, Ontario. We're the sole provider of uranium conversion services for Canadian CANDU reactors, and our manufacturing facilities provide nuclear components for power reactors around the world.
I've been following the testimony of a number of other witnesses before the committee who have done an excellent job highlighting the important and significant contribution that the nuclear sector makes to the Canadian economy and our energy system—60,000 skilled jobs; 16% of Canada's total electricity mix, 60% here in Ontario; a $5-billion industry; and innovation and research and development. Today, then, I would like to focus most of my remarks on the impact that the nuclear sector has in northern Saskatchewan and our approach to community partnerships.
During previous testimony, I believe it was Mr. Harvey—who I see is not here today—who implored our sector to do a better job of telling our story. Mr. Strahl asked a number of questions about public confidence in our nuclear sector. This morning I would like to tell the story of Cameco's approach to indigenous and community relations in northern Saskatchewan and around the world, and the impact that approach has had on public confidence in Cameco's operations.
Indigenous engagement and employment has been a priority for Cameco since our inception in 1988. Our success as a company is directly linked to the long-term, positive partnerships that we have built with first nations, Métis, and other aboriginal communities where we operate. Nearly one third of Cameco's total Canadian workforce is comprised of individuals of first nations or Métis heritage. However, employment opportunities are only one element of Cameco's relationship with our partner communities. This year alone, Cameco, with our partner Areva, has signed two significant partnership agreements in northern Saskatchewan.
In June the “lands of north”—in Dene, “Ya’Thi Néné”—partnership collaboration agreement was signed with three first nation and four northern community partners, based on Cameco's five-pillar approach to community partnerships.
The first pillar is workforce development, with hiring preferences for people from local communities and career awareness so that people who are in elementary and secondary school have the opportunity to move on to post-secondary education, with the understanding that there may be a career available to them in the mining or nuclear sectors.
Second is business development, with a preference for community-owned businesses. It's a significant part of our supply chain, our work with community and aboriginal-owned businesses in northern Saskatchewan.
Third is community engagement, with new structures for engagement and consultation.
Fourth is environment stewardship, with ongoing community-based environmental monitoring of our operations.
The final pillar is community investment, with production-based payments paid to a community trust that the community can use in ways that it sees fit.
This comprehensive and unique agreement builds on an enduring partnership for the development of uranium resources in the Athabasca basin of northern Saskatchewan.
In addition to the lands of the north partnership, Cameco and Areva also announced the Six Rivers Fund, a unique legacy trust fund managed by an independent board of directors focused on youth education, sports, recreation, and health and wellness. The Six Rivers Fund will be supported from the profits of uranium recovery projects at our Key Lake operations.
These projects will be supported using the interest earned on the trust fund investments. In the decades ahead, we hope the Six Rivers Fund will reach a total of roughly $50 million. In its first year of operation, $100,000 was available for community projects in northern Saskatchewan.
We believe we have some of the most advanced and innovative collaborative agreements in the country, and possibly in the world, with our indigenous partner communities. We have moved beyond the approaches of the philanthropic “we should do this” and the risk mitigation “we have to do this” to the value-added “we want to do this”, because it makes our company better.
I have a short story to illustrate this point. Cameco once purchased an exploration property in Australia from a competitor that had spent many years unsuccessfully negotiating with local indigenous communities. Cameco, employing the same approach we use here in Canada, entered into discussions with local leaders and invited them to Saskatchewan to see first-hand how we operate. When we arrived in northern Saskatchewan, we arranged for this Australian delegation to live in our partner communities for a couple of days to ask their own questions and discover on their own how we operate and the relationships we've built with our local partner communities. Shortly after the visit, we were able to enter into a partnership agreement with those aboriginal communities in Australia.
One of the ways our approach to indigenous partnerships benefits our company, besides excellent employees and community businesses that serve our operations, is how we are viewed by our partner communities. Public confidence in Cameco's operations in northern Saskatchewan is very high. This confidence extends to other locations where we operate.
Our latest polling numbers, completed earlier this year, peg our province-wide support in Saskatchewan at roughly 81%. That 81% number also translates into northern Saskatchewan when it is taken as a unique polling sector. In Port Hope, Ontario, roughly the same amount, 89% of residents in the community, support the continuation of Cameco's operations.
While these results are encouraging, they are not surprising. Unlike other forms of energy and electricity generation, polling typically shows that support for the nuclear industry is often strongest where nuclear operations exist; and that the more individuals know and understand about the nuclear sector, the more supportive they tend to be. This, combined with Cameco's ongoing efforts to improve community partnerships, puts us in good stead everywhere we operate.
Canada's uranium mining industry, and the nuclear industry as a whole, is positioned to be a world leader for decades to come in both domestic and international markets. Current political, policy, economic, and environmental drivers are pointing at nuclear energy as a key element of a global shift to low-carbon energy and to a low-carbon economy.
Canada is one of the few countries in the world that can boast of a competitive advantage all along the nuclear value chain. We have the highest-quality uranium deposits and the ability to mine, mill, and refine uranium into fuel for nuclear power plants. Our CANDU reactor technology is deployed around the world. We manufacture reactor components. Our nuclear expertise as it relates to science, operations, technology, and regulation is in demand and recognized as world-class. We have a highly skilled, innovative workforce, including indigenous professionals, capable of making it all happen. With these tremendous strengths, Canada's nuclear sector is poised to take advantage of the opportunities for growth in the international nuclear marketplace.
Here is what we know about nuclear technologies and nuclear energy. Nuclear technology is proven and the long-term economic benefits of nuclear energy are clear. Comparing nuclear to other energy sources, I believe we can conclude that nuclear energy produces very low greenhouse gas emissions from a very small footprint. Our waste is managed in an effective manner, with new technologies emerging all the time to recycle and reuse that waste. A strong nuclear sector catalyses technological and other advances in medicine, material science, advanced manufacturing, and food safety.
Getting back to the point about telling our story, we as a sector do need to tell our story better, but we also need the support of Canadian governments—federal, provincial, and municipal—to help us tell our story. Rarely is the word “nuclear” mentioned by governments when they speak of clean energy or a low-carbon energy future, despite the significant role that nuclear energy could play in that type of future and the role it is already playing today to reduce greenhouse gas emissions around the world. Canadian policy-makers and political representatives should be proud of these contributions by our country and of Canada's leadership in such an important sector.
Canada holds a competitive advantage in the nuclear energy industry. We need to nurture that advantage and capitalize on the opportunities it presents. Invest in the sector. Support the work that is already under way, small modular reactor development as an example, and the basic research required to maintain that competitive advantage long into the future.
Make sure there are places for nuclear engineers and scientists to live and work in Canada by supporting the entire nuclear value chain. Help Canadian companies gain access to international markets for their products and employ more Canadians as a result of their success.
Thank you to the committee for taking the time to study a significant contributor to Canada's economy, the natural resources sector. As a global champion in both the uranium mining and nuclear sectors, Cameco sees tremendous potential in these markets over the next few decades.
I look forward to your questions. Thank you.