Good afternoon, Mr. Chair and committee members. First, I want to thank you for inviting me to speak here today.
I also want to thank the clerk for his excellent work.
My name is Patrick Bateman, and I'm the director of policy and market development at the Canadian Solar Industries Association, or CanSIA.
I have worked with CanSIA for almost eight years. Prior to joining CanSIA, I worked in the clean technology sector in Europe. I am very pleased to be speaking with you all today about the role of solar energy technology in our natural resources sectors.
To begin with, Canada's pan-Canadian framework on climate change and clean growth charts our national course to reduce our greenhouse gas emissions by 30% by 2030, and by 80% by 2050. These are ambitious targets. They are consistent with the level of effort that is required to meet our obligations under the Paris agreement.
Numerous analyses have demonstrated that emissions reductions of this scale can be achieved only through the decarbonization of the electricity system and the subsequent use of that electricity to replace fossil fuels across a wide variety of end uses, including transportation, buildings, and industrial processes. In other words, deep decarbonization requires deep electrification and fuel switching. Furthermore, if we are to expand economic activity in emissions-intensive sectors, we will need to decarbonize, electrify, and fuel-switch even more across our economy to balance our national carbon budget.
The industry whose focus includes the clean technologies that decarbonize, electrify, and fuel-switch is Canada's first new industry of the 21st century. These companies directly employ over 55,000 people in almost 800 firms. It's a highly competitive and innovation-led industry. These companies are at a stage where they plow back revenues into hiring Canadians to build competitive positions in a fast-growing global market. These companies are creating, commercializing, and deploying technologies that protect our environment while growing and diversifying our economy.
Clean technologies that harness solar energy to produce electricity or heat or that integrate that energy into broader energy systems are among the fastest-growing in the clean technology space. The opportunity to position Canada for clean growth with these technologies is massive, as evidenced by the current global marketplace.
Globally, the solar energy industry employed three million people last year, more than any other renewable energy sector. In recent years, Canada's solar industry has been approaching 10,000 jobs, with plenty of potential for growth.
Globally, the solar energy industry also attracts more investment than any other electricity generation space. Solar energy captures the lion's share of that, about $300 billion annually, which for the last several years has been consistently twice that of investment in fossil fuel electricity generation.
In recent years, the solar industry in Canada has been making capital investments of about $1 billion per year. As this investment soars, our prices continue to decline. Estimates place the cost of producing solar electricity in Canada having decreased four or fivefold in the last five years, and continued price declines are not only expected but inevitable with the innovation and progress that's being made.
Despite our impressive progress in recent years and the growth in our clean technology industry, it has been stalling. We need to rise to several challenges to ensure the opportunity to grow and diversify our economy and meet our commitments under the Paris agreement. For this reason, we commend the committee for undertaking this study.
The remainder of my remarks will focus on several areas where regulation and investment from the federal government would support Canada in claiming a position in the leading pack globally.
The federal regulatory framework that will guide Canada's long-term transition toward an increasingly lower carbon energy future at the federal level is under development. Starting in 2018, there will be a financial cost attributed to atmospheric pollution throughout Canada. By 2025, alongside our G7 counterparts, we will have eliminated inefficient fossil fuel subsidies. By 2030, we have a goal of having 90% of our electricity produced from non-emitting sources, due largely to the federally mandated coal phase-out. Currently, there are also consultations under way on performance standards for natural gas electricity generation, and also to lower the emissions intensity of all fuels in transport, buildings, and industrial processes.
Each of these measures is tremendously important for the medium and long term. We laud the federal government's approach and encourage continued action on all of these files.
However, in order to attract the private sector investment that's needed in the short term to create the clean growth that the federal government is seeking, additional investment is going to be required from the federal government, and I will present a small number of areas through which this investment could be channelled.
First of all, the commitment to becoming 100% renewably powered by 2025 demonstrates strong leadership from the federal government that's consistent with the types of commitments that are being made around the world by other national and subnational governments, as well as by many major multinationals, including household names such as Google, IKEA, Coca-Cola, and many more.
Fulfilling this commitment from new renewable electricity generation facilities would lead to new private sector investment, new jobs, new emissions displacement, and support of each of the provinces' targets and goals. The experience of the federal government in achieving this goal could also be used as teachings for other major power consumers that also want to become either more renewable or 100% renewable, as the case may be, in Canada.
The pan-Canadian framework on clean growth and climate change identifies both the green infrastructure initiative and the Low Carbon Economy Trust as opportunities to support the deployment of renewable energy. We are engaging with the relevant departments to explore prioritization and implementation on those fronts.
On tax policy, Minister Carr's mandate letter includes the priority, working with the Minister of Finance, to explore opportunities to enhance existing tax measures to generate more clean technology investments and to engage with the provinces and territories to make Canada the world's most competitive tax jurisdiction.
CanSIA has submitted some comprehensive recommendations to the Standing Committee on Finance as well, including identification of a 30% investment tax credit, which is a mechanism that's demonstrated significant impact and success in the United States, and the absence of which places Canada at a significant competitive disadvantage in North America.
Finally, as previously mentioned, expansion in emissions-intensive natural resources sectors will lead to a need for additional decarbonization, electrification, and fuel switching in other sectors. We would encourage the necessary flexibility in alternative compliance mechanisms that would permit large emitters from one natural resource sector to achieve regulatory compliance by purchasing credits from other renewable energy generators. This is an area where there will need to be a lot of cohesion between federal and provincial policy and regulatory development.
This concludes my remarks.
Again, thank you for giving me the opportunity to speak before the committee.
I look forward to any questions that you may have.