Thank you, Chair. Thank you for the invitation.
I am the managing director of TorchLight, a bioenergy adviser and project developer. We work at the interface of the forest products and energy sectors. Our clients and partners include forest products companies, airlines, manufacturers, oil sands producers, energy utilities, first nations and institutional investors. We have completed approximately 40 projects for the Government of Canada.
Over the 22 years I have worked in bioenergy, Canada's forest products industry has lost 150,000 jobs. Annual timber harvest has declined by almost 50%. Most Canadians are aware that oil is Canada's largest net export today, but in 2004, our largest net export, more than three times the value of oil, was forest products at $53 billion in 2024 dollars. In 2000, Canada was exporting more newsprint than the next 10 countries combined. This production has declined by over 90%. As an example, Ontario used to have 20 pulp and paper mills, and now it has three.
It is true that industries come and go, but forests are different. The counterfactual is not stasis. In most of Canada the counterfactual to active forest management and harvest is wildfires. Canada's forests have gone from net carbon sinks to by far our largest source of greenhouse gas emissions and air pollution, more than everything else in our country combined on both counts. We debate about, frankly, irrelevant oil and gas caps and EV subsidies while our largest carbon asset burns and pollutes our air. Climate change is a numbers game. To put those numbers into perspective, Canada's 2023 wildfires alone emitted an estimated three billion tonnes of CO2. This is more than four times our annual anthropogenic emissions and 75% more emissions than the oil sands for the entire history of the oil sands since 1967. This country is completely missing the point on climate policy, but it seems to also be willing to ignore the tens of billions of dollars of costs to the Canadian economy caused by wildfires annually.
The answer to reducing wildfires is healthy forests, but healthy forests do not mean walking away; it means active management of our publicly owned asset, which when valued at $170 per tonne of CO2 has an asset value of $7.5 trillion. In 2023, we had a net asset loss of $500 billion.
Other boreal forest countries, namely Sweden and Finland, show what is possible. These countries harvest seven times the number of volume per forested commercial hectare as Canada, but on average, they have 2% of the wildfire rate per hectare. While Canada is losing billions of tonnes of carbon from its forests, these Nordic countries are increasing in-forest carbon stocks annually. Yes, counterintuitively they harvest more to store more carbon in the forest.
Can Canada follow the Nordic active management model that lowers the timber costs and builds forest carbon stocks? Yes, but not without bioenergy. It is important to remember that for every tonne of wood that becomes solid wood products, two tonnes of wood, as residues and low-grade timber, is generated. In the absence of pulp mills, the only viable market of sufficient scale to consume the hundreds of millions of tonnes of residues and low-grade wood is bioenergy, and the only viable bioenergy option that can be deployed at scale is heat and power.
The Nordics already show how this works, with almost 40% of energy in Sweden and Finland coming from bioenergy. Stockholm, Copenhagen and Helsinki, along with hundreds of cities and towns, are heated using large heat and power plants fuelled by wood and connected to community-wide underground heat networks. Many manufacturers also use biomass to generate renewable and affordable process steam for low-carbon export products.
The Nordics are now taking bioenergy to the next level by adding carbon capture and storage in a combination known as BECCS. BECCS is the only technology that generates energy and permanently removes carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Think of it. A tree pulls CO2 from the atmosphere and stores it as wood using energy from the sun. When wood is combusted, that's solar energy, what we call bioenergy, and CO2 is released. If we capture and store that CO2 subsurface, we have permanently removed CO2 from the atmosphere. This is called a carbon dioxide removal, or CDR. Since the CO2 removed could have come from any emitter globally, CDRs are an exportable product. Microsoft alone has already committed approximately $6 billion to BECCS CDR offtakes from projects in the Nordics and the U.S.
Most pulp mills and biomass plants in the Nordics are either planning to or are already implementing BECCS. However, Canada is the lowest-cost jurisdiction in the world to generate BECCS CDRs, and it is by far our largest climate-related export opportunity.
Thank you very much.