Thanks, Madam Chair.
Thanks to all of the members of the science and research standing committee for the opportunity to appear before you today.
U15 Canada is an association of Canada's leading research universities. Today's study is concerned with the impact of federal funding policies on research excellence in Canada. Promoting excellence is at the very heart of our work at U15, and I'm confident that Canadians should be very proud of the global impact and competitiveness of our research university system, which punches way above its weight internationally, including in value for money.
Taking the University of Toronto as an example, last year the journal Nature ranked it at number two in the world for impact in health research, after Harvard and ahead of even Johns Hopkins, and yet it also educates more students every year than the entire Ivy League combined.
This is only one example of how our leading research universities deliver value to Canada and Canadians at a low cost to entry. U15 universities alone award 160,000 degrees a year, including to the vast majority of doctors and dentists in Canada, developing a crucial pipeline of talent.
We also know that research conducted at our universities has real-world impact, from research at the University of Saskatchewan to protect the Canadian pork industry from the risks of African swine fever, to research at the University of Alberta on carbon capture and storage aimed at enhancing a clean energy future for our country and to leading work on Arctic monitoring at Université Laval that will help track the impact of climate change and enforce our Arctic sovereignty.
Leading research universities also drive innovation. From artificial intelligence to agriculture, partnership between businesses and post-secondary institutions is a defining feature of our R and D system in Canada, with us ranking third in the G7 and in the top 10 in the OECD in the percentage of private sector R and D done in partnership with post-secondary institutions.
It's also important to underscore that our research universities deliver impact that's truly pan-Canadian. Our universities act as hubs of expertise across extensive networks that bring together other post-secondary institutions, research hospitals, innovative industries and community organizations. In 2022-23 alone, just our 15 universities collaborated with over 3,600 different partners and organizations on tri-agency-funded research in nearly every community and riding across this country.
Canadian research excellence has been made possible in part due to a long-standing cross-party consensus.
The Chrétien government brought in the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and launched the Canada Foundation for Innovation and the Canada research chairs program. The Harper government made major investments in the CFI, launched the Canada first research excellence fund—or CFREF—and the Canada excellence research chairs and funded excellence-based scholarships. As well, the current government has made significant investments in investigator-led research, the new frontiers in research fund and crucial programs in quantum, AI and genomics.
CFREF is expressly designed to create globally competitive platforms for Canadian research strengths. These networks have impact across the country and include projects in important evolving areas for Canada, including the links between brain and heart health at the University of Ottawa, climate change and ocean science at Dalhousie and the health and well-being of children at the University of Calgary.
Another example is the Canada excellence research chairs program, which attracts world-leading scholars to Canada, along with their talented teams, to create clusters of excellence and expertise here.
Another major pillar of our excellence system is the Canada research chairs program, which provides funding for universities to hire some of the best and brightest researchers across all areas of research.
To ensure that Canada's research enterprise can continue to flourish, I am going to suggest the following key principles.
Number one is the best ideas. It's important to note that excellence in research rests on the foundation of peer review, wherein experts in the fields are the ones to judge which proposals move forward and receive funding.
Number two is strong, healthy institutions. Our world-class research universities are a national strength that, again, all Canadians should be proud of, but we're facing unprecedented financial challenges because of decades of stagnant or declining real government funding and turbulence around international students.
Number three is unlocking impact. Our institutions are working hard to unlock the full potential impact of research in our businesses, communities and society through entrepreneurship programs, connectivity hubs for business and extensive partnerships with governments and non-profits in the social sector.
We certainly can do more, and we should do it together.
Thank you. I look forward to your questions.