Thank you.
Good afternoon, Mr. Chair and members of the committee. It's my pleasure to be here today to discuss actions to build sustainable, resilient supply chains in Canada.
The Hamilton-Oshawa Port Authority, or HOPA Ports, is the largest integrated port network on the Great Lakes, with ports and marine facilities in Hamilton, Oshawa and Niagara. We own or manage more than 1,000 acres of industrial port property, and the cargo we handle is connected to 40,000 jobs in Ontario.
In the Great Lakes region, supply chain resilience boils down to capacity and innovation. As we've seen in Hamilton and in Oshawa, there is a tremendous demand for transportation-intensive industrial land, and we are activating more valuable industrial spaces in the Niagara region to attract new jobs and investment. In all of these spaces, we ensure that businesses that locate at the port have a supportive partner and access to efficient connected multimodal transportation services.
One tool that's been extraordinarily effective in capacity building and industrial renewal is the national trade corridors fund, NCTF, which is a successful and well-administered program. Now, more than ever, the NTCF can support cost-effective, energy-efficient supply chains that feed Canada's economic recovery. Let me give you an example of the impacts we can deliver with the help of this program.
In 2017, HOPA started work on its Westport redevelopment project in Hamilton, upgrading port facilities and infrastructure at one of the oldest areas of the port lands. The project included investments of just over $17 million through the NTCF, which was more than matched by HOPA, in new docks, rail extensions, reconfigured cargo handling areas and new warehousing. Now complete, the project has leveraged more than $77 million of private sector investment, the creation of two new development parcels on pier 15, a 105% increase in employment within the zone, a 27% increase in railcar volumes and more cargo being handled through the port, including 100% more steel and 500% more sugar than in 2017.
As we look to other locations around the Golden Horseshoe, we have identified new, shovel-ready infrastructure improvements that would deliver an immediate impact for our local economies, while also enhancing Canada's supply chains.
It's good to look around and see so much opportunity but, like other ports, HOPA is constrained by its borrowing limit and ability to invest in new infrastructure. Ports require a greater ability to raise funds on our own, based on market criteria. I know you've heard this message from other Canada port authorities. HOPA is feeling it too.
We also recommend that ports be empowered to pursue our trade facilitation mandate through a wider definition of multimodal activities that would make it easier to acquire land and operate logistics facilities, inland ports and other supply chain uses. Finally, HOPA, along with our port colleagues, is positioned to help carry forward as champions of Canada's climate reduction goals. As such, we recommend that ports be eligible for federal programs dedicated to decarbonization, innovation and fuels of the future.
The other key to ensuring resilient supply chains is innovation. Here, I want to focus on two aspects: the increasing viability of short sea shipping on the Great Lakes and the role of data in helping us optimize our transportation choices at a system level.
Ontario's Golden Horseshoe is one of the fastest growing regions in North America. It also suffers from some of North America's worst road congestion, costing the economy an estimated $6 billion per year. Coupled with the urgent need to reduce the carbon footprint of transportation, these factors are converging to provide the push necessary to move more traffic to the marine mode.
As you know, there is very little large-scale marine shipping container traffic into the Great Lakes past Montreal, where containers are typically offloaded from vessels and put onto trucks. There are more than 10,000 trucks a day, in fact, rolling down the 401, one of Canada's busiest highways.
Meanwhile, the Great Lakes St. Lawrence Seaway system has capacity to spare, and the market is testing the waters. Just this past summer, our partner in Hamilton trialled a new container service between Montreal and Hamilton. This introduction of new modal choices can help us change goods movement at a system level, which is the scale necessary to make a real impact on GHGs and congestion.
One of the other keys to unlocking this potential is the use of data to uncover which cargo flows might be candidates for greater use of the marine mode. Supported by Transport Canada, HOPA is currently working on a data analysis project that looks at flows between southern Ontario and the U.S. midwest. Projects like this are essential first steps in understanding how new modal choices can transform transportation in the Great Lakes region.
Prior to the pandemic, we were pleased to host members of this parliamentary committee on a tour of the port of Hamilton, and we appreciated the committee's recommendation to establish a formal trade corridor in the Hamilton-Niagara region. The Great Lakes have felt supply chain challenges, but also hold immense potential opportunity. HOPA is always ready to do its part sustainably and in partnership with its port communities.
We look forward to working with you for a resilient and prosperous Canada that makes the most of its transportation infrastructure.
Thank you. I would be pleased to answer any questions.