Thank you, Mr. Chair and members of the committee, for the opportunity to appear before you today.
I'm appearing on behalf of Desgagnés, which is a Quebec-based marine transportation group. The company owns and operates a fleet of Canadian flag vessels and is active in general and dry-cargo transport, liquid bulk transport, essential marine services to Quebec's lower north shore communities, Arctic sealift operations, and maritime port and terminal operations.
From our perspective, Canada's port strategy should be built on major gateways, capable medium-sized ports and Arctic-serving nodes.
Major gateways are indispensable. Canada needs them for scale, specialization and access to global markets. At the same time, if Canada is seeking to further diversify trade, then a port network must do more than move large volumes from a few locations. It must also support community resupply, resource development and industrial supply chains. In practical terms, this includes cargoes such as construction materials, industrial raw materials, mining supplies, forest products, steel, concrete, project cargo and wind turbine components—to name a few—moving to and from industrial users and processing sites.
Many medium-sized ports operate in a very different reality from large, specialized gateways. They require adaptable handling, flexible warehousing, outdoor storage, marshalling areas, efficient rail and road interfaces and, where needed, bonded space and responsive custom services.
As an example, the impact of inadequate infrastructure is evident on Quebec's lower north shore. At La Romaine, one of 12 communities served by the Bella Desgagnés, quay load limits reduce usable container capacity by about 50%, effectively doubling handling requirements and cutting efficiency by roughly 40%. Delays at one port cascade eastward as the vessel cannot make up for lost time along the route.
In practice, weak infrastructure leads directly to higher costs, lower reliability and more fragile supply chains in these communities. In that context, I would respectfully offer three recommendations.
First, the committee should recommend that Transport Canada treat medium-sized, regional, remote and Arctic-serving marine sites as strategic trade infrastructure in the implementation of the new federal corridor and Arctic funding programs. These sites should be assessed not only on their current throughput, but on their long-term strategic contribution to trade resilience and supply chain performance. Relevant investments include berth and wharfage upgrades, dredging where navigation depth is a constraint, warehouse modernization, safe outdoor storage and lay-down areas, improved rail and road connectivity, and environmental improvements that strengthen long-term operational performance.
Second, the committee should recommend that federal project evaluation place explicit weight on industrial enablement and cargo adaptability. Marine development projects should receive stronger consideration where they support industrial clusters, enable secondary and third-tier transformation, accommodate for evolving cargo mixes and complement major gateways. This is a more strategic test than tonnage throughput alone.
Third, the committee should recommend improved trade-enabling coordination and operational responsiveness, including where customs and bonded-area capabilities are needed to support ports handling mixed cargo, including containers in sufficient and efficient routing.
In the Arctic and in the north, Canada is increasingly using an operational base, hub and node approach. That same logic should inform Canada's port system. Having strong major gateways supported by capable secondary sites connected through reliable inland and maritime logistics is how Canada strengthens communities, supports industry and builds more resilient, Canadian-controlled supply chains.
In closing, if Canada intends to expand into new markets and reduce reliance on the United States, it should continue to strengthen major gateways. It should also modernize the broader network around them—regional terminals, medium-sized ports, Arctic-serving nodes and industrial logistics platforms—because that is how Canada builds a system that is efficient, resilient, adaptable and truly national in function.
Thank you.