Thank you, Mr. Chair.
My name is Alex Callahan. I'm the national director of health, safety and environment at the Canadian Labour Congress.
The CLC represents more than three million workers. Workers with affiliated unions work in virtually every sector of the economy, in all occupations and in all parts of Canada.
CLC affiliates also represent workers throughout the electricity system in every province and territory. We appreciate the importance of this study being conducted by the Standing Committee on Natural Resources and we look forward to responding to any questions. I appreciate the invitation to speak to you today.
The mandate of the committee is to study Canada's electricity grid and network, to understand interprovincial tie-ins and gaps, opportunities, and the challenges to improve electrical production and distribution across the country.
This means that the committee must consider workers. While the role of workers in improving the grid is obvious, because they build, maintain, and operate generation, transmission, and distribution assets, workers more broadly are counting on electrification to power new industries, decarbonize existing industries, and reliably power already electrified industries.
Your work will be essential to building a strong economy of the future and creating a sustainable economy. Please consider that union density in the sector has made electricity jobs good and safe across the country.
Additionally, in June 2024, the Canadian Sustainable Jobs Act was given royal assent, committing Canada to creating economic growth and sustainable jobs. These jobs are part of the net-zero trajectory, and by and large are good, safe and well-paid unionized jobs. We always need to be lifting those standards.
Electrifying jobs across the country is an important part of industrial decarbonization, which is a key way to make already good jobs in emissions-intensive sectors into sustainable jobs.
Where are we now? There is a general consensus amongst demand forecasters that there's going to be roughly a doubling of generation to meet demand between now and 2050. Meeting this demand will require significant capital investments in new and refurbished generation, transmission and distribution.
It also means everything from building new generating stations, transmission lines and substations to installing transformers and smart meters and to replacing wooden utility poles with cement and steel to withstand extreme weather. Investments in this capital infrastructure will require significant investments in skilled labour to build, operate and maintain a good state of repair across the grid.
However, despite this acknowledged and existing need, Canada is facing a shortage of electricians. I don't have StatsCan data on related national occupation classifications, or NOCs, but I think it is fair to say that in the absence of information to the contrary, it's probably similar.
In this context, we also note that many other countries have announced, or are pursuing, significant electrification strategies. The IEA lists more than 244 in-force electrification strategies around the globe. This means there will be an increased demand for workers around the world. This also means there is a challenge in finding yourself in a seller's market.
We're facing a shortage, and we cannot assume that skills gaps can be resolved through immigration. This means that you need to be recommending significant investment in training, supporting strong paycheques and investing in education, health care, and public services so that we can attract and retain skilled workers.
We're asking for a sectoral workforce strategy to ensure that we can meet electrification goals and deliver electricity reliably and affordably. That means you should have four key priorities that underpin a workforce strategy: social dialogue; the principles of decent work; accredited training delivered by not-for-profits, such as union training centres; and a commitment to transitioning, with no involuntary layoffs.
What does that mean?
Social dialogue means getting employers and governments to the table with workers.
A commitment to decent work means fair pay, job security, social dialogue and a strong social safety net.
Training means accredited training so that public dollars go into training and not to a middleman.
Finally, a low-carbon grid means a changing generation mix, which means committing to a transition and no involuntary layoffs for the workers who keep the lights on today.
Canada's unions are also asking you to recommend that the government take steps to ensure domestic production of transformers and smart transformers, steel that goes into transmission towers, cement for dams and various products in the supply chain.
A strong domestic manufacturing sector that produces goods will be essential to grid expansion and to the transformation that's essential to ensuring Canada's able to weather supply chain disruptions or spikes in global demand for particular goods related to electrification. Recall my comment earlier about the global demand for electrification.
In respect of these supply chains and the work that needs to be done, Canada's unions believe that the committee should recommend the federal government use a combination of federal procurement and investment tax credits with labour standards. The committee should recommend considering production tax credits with accompanying labour standards to build and ensure viability within the sector while meeting job quality standards in the Sustainable Jobs Act's definition of sustainable jobs.
Finally, in addition to creating a workforce plan—credibly built, with labour at the table—the committee should recommend a focus on affordability and reliability. Workers across the sector are ratepayers. Support for electrification will be contingent on affordable and reliable electricity.
As you're doing all of this work, the committee should recommend the application of labour conditions to projects that receive public funding.
Examples could include mirroring the conditions on the clean economy ITCs for things like prevailing wages and apprenticeship ratios, etc.
Thank you. I look forward to your questions.