Good afternoon, Madam Chair and members of the committee.
As president of the largest government funder of natural sciences and engineering research in Canada, and as the current chair of the Canada research coordinating committee, I am pleased to provide remarks concerning the capstone.
The CRCC is pleased to have the opportunity to engage the research community on the government's vision for this new organization.
Over one month, we held numerous engagement sessions and received 118 written submissions. Respondents voiced clear and consistent themes. These are captured in our report to the ministers, published and shared with you on October 16.
First and foremost, the community called for a continued commitment to investigator-led, fundamental research, which is where the vast majority of major breakthroughs and discoveries occur. They also articulated core values and essential strengths in the current system on which to build the new organization: academic freedom and peer review; equity, diversity and inclusion in research; a commitment to research training and indigenous research priorities; and strong agency leadership with dedicated funding and reliable program delivery. Lastly, they called for sustained community engagement in the design of the new organization and as part of its culture going forward.
During the engagement process, we met with members of the NSERC council and its standing committees, as well as NSERC leaders, a network of over 70 institutional representatives from universities across Canada.
Consistent with the information I just highlighted, there was a focus on, again, the importance of fundamental research; how mission-driven research will be framed; the alignment of research and research infrastructure; the importance of guiding values and principles; and preserving disciplinary funding envelopes.
They also voiced a particular interest in the new organization's relationships with industry. Through our grants, scholarships and fellowship programs, NSERC is committed to developing talent, generating discoveries and supporting innovation in pursuit of economic and social outcomes for Canadians.
Let me leave you with a few facts about NSERC.
Each year, NSERC funds over 11,000 researchers and provides direct support to more than 6,000 students and post-docs. These investments have impact. Since 2015, three researchers based in Canada have won Nobel Prizes in physics, one of the main disciplines supported by NSERC. More importantly, NSERC invested in all three, including Dr. Geoffrey Hinton, the most recent Nobel winner.
When NSERC began supporting his work in the early 1990s through its discovery program, which is investigator-led, the concept of artificial neural networks was purely theoretical. In fact, it can take decades to build the foundations of new, high-impact research areas such as AI. NSERC's early investments in AI research supported not only Geoff Hinton but also other leaders in the field, such as Yoshua Bengio. In addition to decades of research, they have trained whole generations of AI experts. Consequently, Canada's AI research ecosystem has grown by leaps and bounds.
NSERC funding at universities and colleges has supported the development of key world-class technologies in partnership with the private sector in areas such as AI, but also quantum science, biomedical engineering, clean energy, semi-conductors, electric vehicles and agriculture, to name a few.
NSERC's investments have real-life, real-time impacts on Canadian society.
As another example, this year, NSERC awarded Mehdi Sheikhzadeh, a chemical engineer and research administrator at Lambton College, with a prize recognizing partnerships. Origin Materials partnered with Sheikhzadeh and his team to optimize a pilot plant where they extract carbon from non-food biomass. The partnership was a success, and Origin opened a $140-million facility in Sarnia that employs 50 people to produce recyclable, carbon-negative, plant-based plastic bottles.
We can also talk about the remarkable achievements of Professor Jeff Dahn, a lithium-ion battery pioneer at Dalhousie University.
This type of partnership with industry exemplifies our commitment to local innovation and supporting research that moves quickly to meet the needs of our partners.
Thank you for the opportunity to speak to you today. I look forward to answering any questions you may have, and I would be happy to share with you more examples of the research NSERC is funding, which is producing direct and tangible results for Canada and Canadians.