Thank you very much.
Good afternoon, everyone. It's a pleasure to be able to speak to Bill C‑49 today.
People of Newfoundland and Labrador have relied on the ocean forever, and others across Atlantic Canada have too. It's who we are. It's what we know. We are very proud of it. Bill C-49 recognizes a significant opportunity. Out my way, when you see an opportunity, you grab it.
I'm old enough to remember when the accord was born at the hands of people like John Crosbie, Brian Peckford and Bill Marshall. I was lucky enough to work for Premier Brian Tobin when he hit Hibernia first oil and wrote those first speeches.
However, I can tell you that the in-between times were bleak because of the cod moratorium. Oil saved my province. Times were bleak, and then we started to build our offshore. I remember first oil and I remember thinking, “We don't have a clue what we're doing.” We didn't know what was possible, but we knew what could be done and we knew we had to go for it. Jointly, we managed and regulated it through C-NLOPB. We stayed the course and people prospered. In fact, people built up energy and oil and gas right across this country and around the world.
We started in Newfoundland's offshore in what the CEO of Exxon Mobil has described to me as the harshest environment in the world that his company operates in. We found a way. More importantly, we built up one of the most skilled labour forces the world has ever seen. People noticed and companies noticed, much like they're doing right now.
Look, the world is evolving. Where we get our energy and how we get it are evolving too. Naturally, the Atlantic Accord should evolve. Unions agree, industry agrees and the provinces agree. This is because the world is looking for wind and looking for hydrogen, and Newfoundland and Labrador, God knows, has the wind and can produce the clean hydrogen the world is rushing to get.
I must admit that I had my doubts, but then I stood on a runway in Stephenville, Newfoundland, to see the German Chancellor's plane land with possibly some of the top CEOs in the world: the CEOs of Siemens and Mercedes. They were telling us they wanted to buy hydrogen from us. This race around the world is on, and delaying this any more is like starting the race with your shoelaces untied.
Markets are moving. Business is moving. Investment is moving. We need to skate to where the puck is. Today, the Alberta Investment Management Corporation just announced a new billion-dollar fund dedicated to global energy transitions in decarbonization sectors.
This is a challenge, and we are proud to take on a challenge. We applaud the engineering skills that build a West White Rose gravity-based structure, because they are the same skills that build the wind turbine monopiles that are stored right next door in Argentia, Newfoundland.
The same C-NLOPB that has managed the offshore for decades will usher in the same success for wind and hydrogen. Newfoundland and Labrador's offshore industries association, one of the biggest advocates of our offshore over the years, has already gone ahead and changed its name to Energy NL because it knows where the market is headed. That very same Energy NL, which changed its vision in 2022, now looks to a sustainable and prosperous lower-carbon energy industry. It gets it. It's following the money.
This industry will be built. It's already happening. China is already producing half of the global supply of offshore wind. Do you think China is slowing down? Do we want those jobs going to China? No, thank you. I want Newfoundlanders and Labradorians on the ground floor of this trillion-dollar industry. I want them supplying the world with wind and hydrogen and taking home the profits.
Newfoundlanders and Labradorians—Canadians—should not lose out on this. This is about the livelihoods of thousands of workers back in my home province. It's about their families. It is about them doing what they do best.
This bill was drawn up with the provinces of Newfoundland and Labrador and Nova Scotia. The premiers want it. Premier Furey and Premier Houston, one Liberal and one Progressive Conservative, are both urging that we get ahead of this and get on with it because they want it, because businesses in their provinces want it and because workers in their provinces are the best in the world at it.
We have done so in the past, and we will do so again.