Thank you very much, Mr. Chair and honourable members. It's really good to be here.
I have to say that the report we're really focused on today was initiated nearly two years ago, and was submitted to the Minister of Transport about eight months ago, so I've had lots of soak time or gestation time to reflect. I have intentionally stayed away from the media and I've stayed away from conferences and symposia. I really did not want to become the object of the report, as it were. I wanted the report to be debated as a document of substance.
If I can say so, while many people refer to it as the Emerson report, it is actually not the Emerson report. A five-person advisory panel worked with me. I chaired the panel. Murad Al-Katib was one of the experts on the panel. He has a deep knowledge of the agricultural sectors in Canada. We also had on the panel Duncan Dee, a former senior executive at Air Canada; Marcella Szel, a former senior executive at CP Rail; Marie-Lucie Morin, my former deputy minister when I was in trade and foreign affairs, and she's actually in the back of the room today; and David Cardin, who was a senior executive with Maersk, the largest shipping company in the world.
The report was really intended to look out 25 to 30 years. It was not intended to be a micro here and now to-do list. What we tried to do was place Canada in the context of some of the major geopolitical forces that will affect our country and our economy over the next few decades and ask what we need to be doing today to be ready to be globally competitive and economically successful two or three decades out. I can tell you that two or three decades is not a long time in the world of transportation. Most of you will be all too familiar with infrastructure projects that are in the planning stages and approval stages for sometimes multiple decades or until they die, whichever comes first. Usually they die, as we saw with the Mackenzie Valley pipeline. It's the same with regulation. When you're changing regulation in the transportation sector, you really have to be looking out at a very, very long-term perspective in order to enable what is a very, very complex transportation system to adjust to any changes that are material in terms of the right policy and regulation.
I would really just focus on the emphasis in the report. There are a couple of things I would note rather than take you through any detail. The first is we have attempted, as I've already suggested, to link transportation issues and transportation policy, regulation, and so on to the Canadian economy. The linkage is through trade. Transportation has now, in my opinion, become actually more important than trade policy to trade success, because in reality there is so much international investment that allows commercial footprints to span the globe, and tariffs have been relatively low these days, that transportation actually is a larger component of overall cost structures than almost anything you can think of on the trade front. If you get transportation right, that will be the number one way to ensure the competitiveness of the country going forward.
Linkage to trade and economic success.... Of course, transportation is the glue that in many respects binds the country together. We are a hugely expansive country with a thin population spread among three oceans, and transportation is absolutely critical to the unity and cohesion of the country. It is vital to the national character, if you like.
Rather than pointing to a specific recommendation, I believe the most important thing for the government to do is get decision-making right. That's why I urge you to pay close attention to the chapter on governance. Governance is all about decision-making—from big policy decision-making that has to span all of government, right down to the minutia of regulatory decision-making—that you have to get right, that has to be in real time, and that has to be extremely well informed by good information. Yes, we have individual recommendations throughout the report, but if you don't get governance right, you're really not doing very much. You're playing around at the edges.
With that, I will rest my case and respond to questions, Mr. Chair.