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I call this meeting to order.
Welcome to meeting number 129 of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Fisheries and Oceans.
This meeting is taking place in a hybrid format, pursuant to the Standing Orders.
Before we proceed, I would like to make a few comments for the benefit of witnesses and members. Please wait until I recognize you by name before speaking. Those in the room can use the earpiece and select the desired channel. Please address all comments through the chair.
Pursuant to Standing Order 108(2) and the motion adopted by the committee on Monday, September 16, 2024, the committee is resuming its study of the impact of the reopening of the cod fishery in Newfoundland and Labrador and Quebec.
Welcome to the witnesses here today.
On Zoom, we have, from the Nunatsiavut Government, Jim Goudie, deputy minister of lands and natural resources.
Thank you for taking the time to appear. You will have five minutes or less for your opening statement.
Mr. Goudie, the floor is yours.
:
Good evening, Mr. Chair and committee members.
My name, as the chair just alluded to, is James Goudie. I'm the deputy minister of lands and natural resources for the Nunatsiavut government. I thank you for the opportunity to present here today.
Cod is more than an economic resource. It's an iconic species for Labrador Inuit. It's central to our way of life, for both sustenance and culture. Therefore, it is crucial that the Nunatsiavut Government is involved in the management of and access to this resource as it recovers.
Over the past three years, we have seen encouraging signs of cod stock recovery in the waters off our shores. Our inshore fishers report positive catches, and we are optimistic about the future of this fishery. While there's still work to be done, we are hopeful these signs will be supported by upcoming assessments and collaborative management efforts.
The Labrador Inuit have been historically excluded from sharing this resource, and we do not support a return to where quotas were distributed without our meaningful participation. It is essential that Inuit and other true and legitimate indigenous groups are given proper recognition and rights to this important resource on a go-forward basis. The Nunatsiavut Government, which represents the only Inuit collective in Atlantic Canada, does not recognize the NunatuKavut Community Council as an indigenous organization, and does not support their involvement in this allocation process. The Nunatsiavut Government and the Innu Nation are the only recognized indigenous governments in Labrador and should be the primary beneficiaries of this resource.
In 2003, inshore cod-affected fishers were offered shrimp allocations in shrimp fishing area 5, which overlaps with our marine zone. With the reopening of the commercial cod fishery, we believe the shrimp quota should be reassigned to the Nunatsiavut Government. This would make a minimum of 11% of the total shrimp quota available to Labrador Inuit fishers, as outlined in the Labrador Inuit Land Claims Agreement.
The 599.4-tonne cod quota allocated to the Nunatsiavut Government has been 97% landed to inshore plants in this province, benefiting 12 Labrador Inuit fishers and supporting numerous spinoff benefits to inshore plants. While we have landed our cod exclusively using the inshore, we do not believe the Department of Fisheries and Oceans, or Canada, should be able to dictate to the two indigenous groups in Labrador how to land their cod. We appreciate the ability to use the offshore for our quota allocation, should we choose to do so. We have had an excellent collaboration with regional DFO staff in drafting a comprehensive harvesting plan for our cod allocation. This partnership ensures our harvesting practices align with sustainable management principles. We look forward to continuing this productive collaboration.
Based on what we are seeing in our water, we anticipate a positive 2025 stock assessment. Our fishers are seeing good signs of cod recovery, and we are hopeful this trend will be confirmed in the upcoming assessment.
The Nunatsiavut Government is committed to working with the Government of Canada and all stakeholders to ensure the long-term sustainability of this important resource. We look forward to continuing to engage with the standing committee, and we are encouraging a fair and inclusive process that respects the rights and interests of Labrador Inuit and other true indigenous peoples.
Thank you for your time. I'm happy to answer any questions.
Thank you to Mr. Goudie for appearing before this committee.
Mr. Goudie, I might get off on a little tangent here, but right now, raw seal skins and seal products are not permitted to be exported out of Newfoundland and Labrador. That was addressed in a Senate committee report and in a report from this committee here—basically interprovincial trade barriers in seal products and how they reduce our access to harvest seals. Now, 400,000 seals, according to the latest estimate I saw, with a diet of 2.99 tonnes per day, consume over 100 million tonnes of fish, various species throughout the year.
How's that going to impact the growth of the cod biomass?
Oceana and Oceans North both submitted written testimony to this committee calling for the capelin fishery to be abolished. The seal population in Atlantic Canada is estimated to consume over a million tonnes of capelin per year, yet somehow Oceana and Oceans North feel that a mere 25,000-tonne capelin fishery in Atlantic Canada is holding back the growth of the cod stock. We're talking about 25,000 tonnes compared to a million tonnes.
Mr. Goudie, do you think that Oceana and Oceans North have a leg to stand on in calling for the demise of the capelin fishery? They're saying that 25,000 tonnes is holding back the recovery of the cod fishery.
I think one thing that's forgotten by a lot of these online sleuths and others involved in the fishery is that when the cod moratorium was put in place, there was no Labrador Inuit land claim agreement.
There are certain stipulations in there that we expect from the Canadian government in terms of consultation and engagement on any fishery species that might be adjacent to or within Nunatsiavut waters: early engagement and certainly what we think is a fair and equitable treatment of our rights in our waters for those fishery stocks adjacent to us. I think that in terms of cod, DFO did a somewhat better job than in some of the other fishery species in terms of contacting us early. We hope that that continues.
We don't see, historically, that what cod was allocated was fair, nor does it represent the current situation of the Canadian government or the reality of Canada in terms of land claim agreements, which have advanced since that time.
Thank you to the witness for being here. Once again, the witnesses are teaching us a lot.
From what you say, Mr. Goudie, you have a good relationship with the Department of Fisheries and Oceans, or DFO, and it listens to you.
We've had witnesses come before us and talk about a system in which fishers would be involved in all aspects of the fishery. Those witnesses were in favour of including fishers in the management system.
Is that a possibility on your end, according to the people you represent?
I have a question for Mr. Goudie about the current assessment that's began with the bottom trawl survey. I'll just hold up the map right here. There's all this inshore area here that goes from the mid-Labrador coast all the way down along the northeast coast of Newfoundland and Labrador within a mile of the land—what we call, back home, “in around the rocks”. I'm hearing tremendous reports of northern cod being reported by guys who are out hunting seabirds or whatnot. They're seeing this codfish acoustically.
In the meantime, the offshore survey is taking place out here, in this shaded area, at the exact same time as this massive amount of codfish is being reported in the very nearshore zones, so how accurate do you think the cod survey is? How accurate can the results be, when we have this massive amount of fish being reported very nearshore while the DFO survey is taking place 50 to 100 miles offshore?
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Well, that's a hard position to follow from.
First and foremost, Mr. Goudie, thank you for being here.
I also want to welcome MP Lightbound, MP Collins and MP McCauley.
There are a couple of things before I go to you with questions. One thing that I think tends to get lost in a lot of this is that this is a good-news story for Newfoundland and Labrador. After 30-plus years of not fishing northern cod, this is an amazing story with respect to the rebound of the fishery over a long period of time and the suffering, the tenacity and the patience of the people of Newfoundland and Labrador. We felt the moratorium in Cape Breton back in the early nineties. Lots of men and women fishers and their families went through an incredible ordeal.
That said, I want to talk a little bit about.... When we're done with the study, which will be today, we will meet in in camera sessions to discuss the report, and we'll be here to discuss recommendations that go in the report. Mr. Goudie, I think you started it off very well in your opening remarks in terms of where the recommendations would go, but I want to give you an opportunity to hold the pen right now and write some recommendations or, in this case, talk to us about what you would want to see in a report from this committee. That's the first question.
The second question I'm very interested in is about the economic impact of this quota allotment. I'm wondering if you can speak to that. You also mentioned future allotments. This might be in your recommendations, but what kind of economic impact would that bring? I think both you and MP Collins talked about the cultural and historical significance. I'm wondering if you could talk about the economics of it as well.
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I guess for the first part of your question, I'll say the same thing I told DFO at the very first meeting I had with them, which is that I want it all, 100% of everything in 2J3KL, you name it. They told me I was crazy and started laughing at me, but I was dead serious. For 150 years.... My great-grandfather was the steward of the Newfoundland fleets when they came up this way. Let's give it all to us. We'll share some with the Innu. And then, in 150 years' time, let's have this conversation again, and then we'll all talk about sharing it once upon a time.
The resources that are off the Nunatsiavut coast aren't benefiting the Nunatsiavut people the way they should be. The same can be said for turbot. The same can be said for shrimp. The same can be said for crab. I don't understand why we're not here having a meeting about shrimp and the offshore—but hey, that's just me. We're the only ones who fish it inshore.
That being said, on the economic impact for this year, obviously, we went from one designated fisherman to 12. All of those small communities are 100% isolated. There are no roads, so it's just fly in, fly out, or ferry it in, in summertime. That's a major impact to even the grocery store there.
Hopefully next year, the plant that processes our turbot and crab will be able to process the cod as well. That should somewhat extend either the overall workforce or the season, so you have more dollars pouring into that community in particular. I would like to see more designated fishermen in smaller vessels so that they can go out on day trips to fish and then land to the plant. We're hoping that'll have a massive economic impact as we can designate more people to fish cod under the allocations that we get.
In terms of the dollar figure, I can't give that to you right now. There are lots of things that need to be assessed and brought forward to me. However, the cod allocations that we do get from the federal are certainly having and will have an impact on the economy in Nunatsiavut.
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I want to say thank you to Mr. Goudie for appearing before committee today and for testifying and answering all those wonderful questions.
We're going to suspend now to set up for our next panel.
I want to say a big welcome to Ms. Collins, who is representing Ms. Barron here today, and to Mr. Lightbound, who's filling in for Mr. Cormier, I believe.
Also, welcome, Mr. McCauley. You can pass that on to Mr. Genuis as well. It was good to have him here for the few minutes that he was here. You don't have to, if you don't want to. You can take all the praise yourself.
Again, we'll suspend for a few minutes now to switch out panels.
Pursuant to Standing Order 108(2) and the motion adopted by the committee on Thursday, February 8, 2024, the committee is resuming its study on the review of the Fisheries Act.
Welcome to our witnesses in the room.
From the Canadian Aquaculture Industry Alliance, we have Tim Kennedy, president; and Mia Parker, executive board member. Also with us is Francis Bradley, president and chief executive officer for Electricity Canada.
Thank you for taking the time to appear today. You will each have five minutes or less for opening statements.
For the Canadian Aquaculture Industry Alliance, I believe Mr. Kennedy will do the opening statement.
You have the floor for five minutes or less, please.
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Thank you, Mr. Chair. Thank you, members of the committee.
The more than 60 companies and 17,000 people working in the aquaculture sector whom I'm representing here today are directly engaged in almost all of the issues this committee addresses, so we are grateful for the opportunity to share our views with you. I think it's been many years for us.
For most Canadians, the aquaculture sector is out of sight and out of mind. They enjoy our oysters, our mussels and our Atlantic salmon but rarely link them all back to our farms or the people who work there. However, we are, indeed, farmers, and just like farmers raising cattle, sheep or pigs, we raise our animals from their earliest life stages and feed them, care for them and bring them to markets across Canada and the world. We raise our animals in water, but we are farmers just the same.
Right now, over 50% of the world's seafood is raised through farms. We are the path to growth for seafood production. With the longest coastline in the world, Canada has the opportunity to be a global leader for job creation, affordable food production and sustainable food security for Canadians. In many countries, our competitors operate under the auspices of national aquaculture legislation that provides support and operational certainty for farmers. In Canada, the only reference to aquaculture in a federal statute is in the Bank Act.
No, Mr. Chair, that is not a typo. The Bank Act does actually define “aquaculture”—inaccurately, I might add—and confirms that aquaculture operators may use their infrastructure and fish as security for bank loans. Beyond that, federal statutes are silent with respect to our industry, in a way that is completely out of step with how Parliament considers almost every other part of the agriculture sector and the industry more generally.
This situation presents considerable challenges for our sector. It creates an atmosphere of uncertainty for our operations and investments. It creates an uneven playing field across Canada and puts far too much discretion in the hands of ministers and bureaucrats, and it deprives aquaculture of the support and clarity that the rest of the agriculture sector enjoys across Canada.
This situation needs to change. In the longer term, Canada needs purpose-built modern national aquaculture legislation that is centred on our role as food producers. In the more immediate term, we believe that five minor changes to the Fisheries Act could start the legislative ball rolling and position the government to more effectively support and steward the sector.
First, we believe that aquaculture needs to be properly defined in law. It would be helpful to include a definition in the Fisheries Act along these lines: “aquaculture is a form of agricultural production designed to produce food and/or food products for human and/or animal consumption and includes the rearing of privately owned plants and animals in captivity throughout their life cycle.” This would provide clarity and certainty for the sector and for DFO efforts to regulate it.
Second, we believe the word “aquaculture”, defined appropriately, should be added to the list of topics in section 43, which deals with regulations. This would allow for the design of regulations specifically focused on aquaculture directly, rather than via the current backdoor approach using regulatory structures designed for other purposes.
Third, the act should be revised to direct the minister to develop a precautionary approach policy or framework specific to aquaculture. Unsurprisingly, the act is designed to bring the precautionary approach to bear with respect to commercial fisheries and related habitat concerns. This approach is not suitable for the regulation of the site-based, high-technology operations of our sector. A more realistic and appropriate approach is needed and should be guided by law, not by ministerial or bureaucratic whims or inclinations.
Fourth, given that aquaculture is a form of agriculture, the act should be revised to drive collaboration between DFO and Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada and the agriculture governance system more generally. Ultimately, we would like to see AAFC assuming a mandate for aquaculture in a way that would lead to more effective federal support for the sector and remove the perceived conflict of interest in the current DFO position with respect to our sector.
Fifth, on a note that applies beyond just the aquaculture domain, we strongly believe that the act should be modernized to increase decision-making transparency and transform the current black-box approach the minister and DFO utilize. It's essential that all Canadians and, certainly, our sector are aware of the scientific data and information the minister uses in making decisions with respect to them. A Fisheries Act amendment requiring the minister to publicly share such information would dramatically increase decision-making integrity and credibility and focus debates on real issues rather than political posturing.
Mr. Chairman, our sector is a heavily regulated, technology-driven and ecologically sustainable industry of vital importance to the economic and social well-being of coastal and rural communities across Canada. There is tremendous opportunity ahead, despite the unfortunate and unnecessary headwinds at present. It needs and deserves a more constructive, predictable and fair legislative base than the Government of Canada has put in place to date. Our five recommendations would be important first steps in this regard, and I would of course be more than happy to address any of them in more depth with the committee here today.
Thanks very much for your time.
My name is Francis Bradley, and I am the president and CEO of Electricity Canada. Thank you for the invitation to appear before you today as part of your study on the Fisheries Act.
Electricity Canada is an association that represents the country's power companies, the companies that generate, transport and distribute electricity in every province and territory in the country.
[English]
Mr. Chair, let me start by cutting to the chase. The fundamental issue is that we now have a fish act, not a fisheries act.
First, let me put this in context. Canada is experiencing a rapid increase in electricity demand. We expect demand for electricity to double or triple by 2050, and to meet this, we need to build at a pace not seen since the 1950s. According to the Canada Energy Regulator, this will require increasing hydroelectric generation by more than 25%. To do this, we need a regulatory environment that is predictable, and it's urgent.
As it stands now, the Fisheries Act does not offer this. The 2019 changes to the act shifted the focus from protecting fisheries to a narrow focus on individual fish. This has resulted in project delays and increased costs to Canadians, without significant benefits to fisheries. When the changes were originally debated, our industry raised concerns that the Department of Fisheries and Oceans would be overwhelmed with an influx of applications for FAAs, Fisheries Act authorizations. This has been the case, and the department has not been resourced adequately to manage the volume of applications.
It was suggested that, prior to implementing the changes, a pathway to compliance be developed alongside alternative compliance mechanisms. Unfortunately, here we are, five years later, and key regulations and guidance materials have not been developed and no clear pathway has been established for the hundreds of facilities that became non-compliant overnight. How did they become non-compliant overnight? It's because they were designed to protect fisheries, not individual fish.
Some of our members have more than 100 years of experience operating their hydroelectric infrastructure. They take every possible step to be responsible stewards of the local fisheries, from the design of their facilities to developing best practices and entering into local conservation partnerships. They have time-tested processes to mitigate the impacts of routine, low-level projects. Fisheries Act authorizations should be reserved for activities that have a higher potential for adverse impacts.
We have always worked and will always work collaboratively with government to find solutions. In fact, right now, our stewardship committee is in Ottawa for a workshop with the DFO on ways to improve the implementation of the act. While these engagements are necessary for productive industry-government collaboration, we need to get moving on improving the regulatory environment if we want to meet our climate and economic goals.
To enhance regulatory certainty, promote the sustainability of fisheries and better enable economy-wide electrification, we recommend, first, that the purpose of the Fisheries Act should be restored to the protection of fisheries instead of individual fish. This ecosystem approach would be in line with the original intention of the act and allow DFO officials to set reasonable and realistic targets based on the resources they have available. This can be achieved through modest amendments to the act or the development of an electricity-specific regulation that reflects the unique realities of our sector.
Second, the minister should issue an operational directive with guidance to the department on the development of compliance mechanisms for low-risk, routine activities. This will ease the burden on the department, as well as improve implementation for the industry.
Finally, DFO should continue to work to implement the cabinet directive on regulatory and permitting efficiency for clean growth projects. Taking a cross-government approach is how we will achieve the regulatory harmony and efficiency we need to get critical clean electricity projects built.
To conclude, it's the impacts of climate change that present the most existential threat to fisheries. Getting clean electricity infrastructure built is critical to reducing our emissions and mitigating these impacts, ultimately protecting Canadians and fisheries.
Mr. Chair, you will find in the brief that we presented 11 specific recommendations in appendix B.
Thank you for the opportunity to join you today.
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In 2018, our peak was 148,000 tonnes of Atlantic salmon produced. As a comparison, last year, in 2023, with cuts in British Columbia, we're at about 89,000 tonnes. We haven't been that low in terms of our salmon production in the country since 2002.
To compare it to Norway, Norway has a goal of increasing the value from the salmon sector five times by 2050, and it produces about 1.5 million tonnes of salmon.
One other example I'd like to bring up is the Faroe Islands. They are a very small North Atlantic set of islands between Shetland and Iceland. Basically, they have 1,000 kilometres of coastline, compared to Canada's 80,000 kilometres of coastline. They now produce the same amount of salmon as all of Canada.
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On the global market for salmon.... Let me say first that salmon is the top choice of Canadians for seafood. There's no question about it. It's fresh Atlantic salmon, by a considerable margin. Salmon is the first choice. Shrimp would come second. Other species are actually quite far down. I think that's a really important realization. As much as we would like to grow more diversity with other products, what Canadians and North Americans want is more salmon.
The global market for salmon production is quite tight. When you take out 80,000 tonnes of salmon from British Columbia, for instance, what you're doing is spiking the price. You're limiting the access of Canadians to Canadian-grown salmon, first of all, but also to salmon in general.
Where do you get that salmon? You're going to get salmon from Chile. You're going to get salmon from Norway. What that immediately does, obviously, is change the price, but it also immediately boosts the carbon footprint, because how do you get that salmon? You're air-freighting it into the country. Our estimate, with just the reductions that have happened in British Columbia to date, reducing salmon production by 35,000 tonnes, is that what you're looking at is actually adding about 90,000 gas cars on the roads. That's the carbon equivalent: 90,000 cars.
From a climate, health, Canadian supply and food security perspective, it really doesn't make sense that we're shutting down these salmon farms.
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Let me start by saying that since 2002, basically, the aquaculture production in Canada has largely flatlined. It's been flat. For over 20 years, we've had largely flat aquaculture production. Value has increased over time, but in terms of quantity, it's basically been flat.
I think DFO, if they're an advocate of our sector, have done a really bad job. I'll just start there. We actually have not experienced DFO as a proper advocate in any way, but there is certainly a perception, especially in British Columbia in the activist community, that there is this conflict around development and regulation. We accept that. We think it is time to address that, and it's not a difficult change. It's really a structural change within the government that has to change that mandate around Agriculture Canada for development purposes.
I just think that addressing that perception within a certain community of the country is important. I think that's something we would really support. It's time to do that.
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Thank you for a very interesting question.
First and foremost, yes, the potential impacts of the Fisheries Act, particularly as it is now more of a fish act, certainly go beyond hydroelectric facilities. It has the potential to impact any electricity facility that makes use of water. That can include a wide variety of technologies, such as nuclear facilities that actually make use of water, tidal facilities and so on.
There's another aspect to this as well. One of the reasons that we tend to focus first on hydro and on hydro facilities in this conversation is that.... When we project forward to a 2050 scenario, regardless of whose scenario you're looking at, it will be what we refer to as an “all of the above” approach to meeting our electrification and decarbonization needs. In the future, there will be things such as offshore wind, tidal power, onshore wind and so on. However, hydro will play an absolutely critical role in being able to backstop those technologies. Yes, we need to focus on what we can do to build out more wind, more tidal and so on, but we also need to make sure that we expand the hydro system so that it can backstop those new technologies. Therefore, on the days when the wind doesn't blow and the sun doesn't shine, we would still be able to meet the needs of customers in a way that doesn't have a significant impact on the environment.
I want to thank the witnesses for being here today.
First, I'll go to Mr. Kennedy.
I think we may have a different position on open-net farms. B.C. is the last place on the west coast of North America that has open-net Atlantic salmon farms. There have been dozens of studies showing the harms to wild Pacific salmon. A majority of British Columbians and over 120 first nations across B.C. support a transition away from open net-pen salmon farms.
However, I think we probably can agree that, in any transition, workers need to be supported, and there needs to be a comprehensive transition plan, a jobs plan. The government recently tabled the draft transition plan for moving away from open-net fish aquaculture in B.C. The draft plan was released seven weeks after their self-imposed deadline, and there was hardly any clear information on what the plan would actually look like.
Can you talk a little bit about what that actually means? What are the impacts of the lack of certainty on your transition planning? What are the impacts on communities? What happens when this uncertainty persists?
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You're right. We certainly disagree on a number of the foundational issues that you raised.
I think one thing that we can agree on is that we actually do embrace transition. We recognize that there are a lot of very deep public perceptions about the sector and that change needs to happen.
I will say that change has happened. Occasionally, we will be struck by how a lot of the criticism that we hear is actually criticism of a salmon-farming industry that no longer exists. It's criticism from the early 2000s about operations and activities that actually have been curtailed or changed over many years.
With respect, Ms. Collins, the other thing I do want to ask is about what jobs you are talking about. You've lived in Port Hardy. These are areas that have almost no other job opportunities in them. We're talking about very good, well-paid, middle-class jobs in British Columbia, in small communities, in first nations communities all across Vancouver Island.
When the NDP, for instance, talks about job transition, what is it to? There are very few other jobs. Are you talking about call centres? We're talking about biologists, scientists and engineers who are highly trained. We have the youngest agri-food workforce in Canada. Two-thirds of the workforce in British Columbia in our salmon-farming sector is under the age of 35. These are extremely well-trained people.
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Yes, I think you're right about the lack of hope. There's actually a fair bit of despair that's been created by this approach and this decision.
To be clear, transition is one thing, and there was an original commitment to transition away from ocean net-pens. That's something that we can actually embrace. What we can't embrace is an outright ban on ocean pens, because that's just not happening. It's not possible. People will lose their jobs. We have 5,000 people still employed directly and indirectly by the sector. They don't have anywhere to go right now.
To answer your question, there have been no approaches around other job training. There is a process going on at the moment to discuss some of these things, but it's totally inadequate, and it's very rushed. People are in a really difficult position.
Again, Ms. Collins, I'll just say that the NDP has been a real driver of this extreme decision, so I think a lot of that lack of hope and a lot of that despair needs to fall with you and your party.
Thank you to all the witnesses here today.
I want to start off with Mr. Bradley, if I could.
On December 7, 2016, Dr. David Schindler appeared before this committee—some of us were here at that time, and I was one of them—for a study of the 2012 changes to the Fisheries Act. Dr. Schindler told the committee at the time that the Trudeau government-proposed climate change action plan for reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 contained four scenarios, three of which proposed replacing fossil fuel power with so much hydroelectric power that we'd need 100 facilities the size of Muskrat Falls in Labrador or Site C in B.C. We'd have to build that many more between 2016 and 2050.
Can you tell me how much new hydroelectric power generation has been created since that statement in 2016, eight years ago?
We're going to have to scoot through a couple of questions here.
Going back to 2012 and the Cohen report, recommendation 2 says, “In relation to wild fisheries, the Department of Fisheries and Oceans should act in accordance with its paramount regulatory objective to conserve wild fish.” Following on that, of course, we have recommendation 3, which says, “The Government of Canada should remove from the Department of Fisheries and Oceans’ mandate the promotion of salmon farming as an industry and farmed salmon as a product.”
First of all, do you agree with that second recommendation, that DFO should get out of the business of being mandated to look after your industry?
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Thank you very much for the question.
It's a really interesting paradigm when you talk about what we would do with DFO science. I would say that what we really need to do with DFO science is recruit more scientists.
We have an avalanche, a waterfall, of really high-quality scientists retiring and very few new scientists being recruited to take their place. We're about to have a massive gap in our body of knowledge when it comes not just to aquaculture, but to fisheries management in general, because good management should be evidence-based and it should actually be based on sound science.
We've been speaking about a transition here today and the interactions between wild and farmed fish, but you need to know the stock status and the best ways to conserve wild fish if you're going to manage interactions.
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I'll have to interrupt you there because my time is short.
It occurs to me that what we've heard in testimony about DFO science is that—and this is my opinion—it's badly compromised because you get industry funding the science, and it has vetting authority over the results of the science, which really doesn't pass the sniff test with a lot of people. I don't think DFO science, as it's done, has done you any favours in your industry.
I'll go to Mr. Bradley.
I need to give you all of the time I have remaining to explain how you differentiate fisheries from a fish. You can't protect a fishery if you don't protect the fish. Can you just explain the difference that you see there, please?
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Certainly. Thank you very much.
The distinction is an important one, because right now, with the focus on individual fish as opposed to supporting the fishery, we find ourselves in a very different situation than we were in previously.
When there is what we refer to as an incidental take—when fish are killed—it is a bad day for my member companies. They have always sought to make sure they operate in a manner that limits that, but they also take action to mitigate those sorts of things by building facilities that now have fish passages, for example. There are a number of examples of that. We have fish hatchery programs. We have habitat enhancement that takes place. In all those cases, the mitigation measures are more than making up for the incidental take—the fish that are killed as a result of our operations.
That doesn't work under the current regime. Under the current regime, we're supposed to be protecting the individual fish as opposed to the overall fishery. For a number of our facilities, we're unable to get those FAAs because fish are being killed, even though the mitigation measures more than make up for that, and that is a problem.
This is all very interesting. It's crazy, I'd like to keep you here for another hour.
Still, I'm going to go back to Mr. Kennedy or Ms. Parker.
Aquaculture straddles two areas, agriculture and fisheries. How can we draft satisfactory legislation, avoid mistakes, improve scientific research and strengthen aquaculture, which, realistically, is becoming a necessity? How can we put in place solid legislation on both fronts that could benefit the development of your industry? It has to address both agriculture and fisheries, because both are involved. What are you proposing?
I'll go back to Mr. Kennedy or to Ms. Parker.
Philanthropists who have practised scorched earth all their lives are trying to buy their penance, I guess, by supporting ENGOs. In terms of our seal harvest in Newfoundland and Labrador, they still say that we're harvesting whitecoats, which hasn't happened since 1983.
You mentioned that there's a portrayal of your industry that's no longer accurate. Can you speak to that?
:
Sure. We have done research, and I think the story needs to be told more broadly. We know that tens of millions of dollars have been brought into Canada from U.S. foundations in the early 2000s and have been also mixed in with Alaskan salmon interests to demarket farm salmon. This happened in the early 2000s. Since then, opposition to the sector has been picked up, but all of that seed funding has resulted in what I think Ms. Collins was talking about, which is this broader antagonism towards the sector based on practices that....
The sector is 50 years old in British Columbia. It's not very old. It's about 45 years old. That's only a few generations of production. When we started the production in British Columbia, was it perfect? Absolutely not. Has it been massively improved? Yes, it has. What we find in social media, for instance, in the criticisms, is that they always recycle. It's very hard to stop these things and to correct these things. It's reached a point, obviously, where the Liberal government believed this opposition was so strong that it needed to shut things down.
That is really not what public polling says. Public polling says there are concerns, which we recognize. We can make changes to our industry, quite dramatic changes, with existing technology. You do not need to shut down net pens. That is so extreme. This is what I think all of this opposition has been pointing to.
Can you imagine? Again, on the science perspective, we go from CSAS reports saying that we pose no more than “minimal risk” to wild salmon to suddenly saying that we have to shut down, that it's 100% risk and it has to go away. That's exactly what this decision is, banning open-net salmon farms. It seems like there is almost a shadow government of environmentalists that is trying to control the minister to shut us down, which is, again, so extreme. I'm sorry, but I will say that the NDP has been a big part of that.
:
I think this goes back to my initial point, which was about the change in 2019 from the goal of protecting fisheries to protecting individual fish. I think the intention should go back to precisely that. From a legal standpoint, I think that would be the simplest step, at this stage. We've provided that as a recommendation in terms of the amendments. This would be really the starting point for this. It would remove the ambiguity we have today.
As I said earlier, we believe this will be absolutely essential if we're going to be able to continue to grow the clean electricity system and get good, clean electricity projects built. This legislation, other pieces of legislation, other regulations—I always see them on a bit of a spectrum. On one end of the spectrum, it's a barrier. On the other end of the spectrum, it's an enabler. If you're lucky, it's somewhere in the middle. Right now, the Fisheries Act is definitely on the side of that spectrum where it is a barrier. It could be an enabler, but it is not. We need to address this.
As I said, I hate coming back six years later and saying that we could have addressed this when we did the legislative change in 2019. I think we need to do it now.
Mr. Kennedy, Ms. Parker and Mr. Bradley, I want to thank you for sharing your knowledge with the committee members today. Hopefully, it will show up in the report that will be done at the end of the day on this particular study. Thank you for coming. We appreciate your being here.
On Monday, we will resume our study of the Fisheries Act. We'll have officials from DFO and Environment and Climate Change Canada for the first hour, and stakeholders for the second hour.
On the 's appearance, the minister is available on December 4 for an hour, and officials for two hours, on the supplementary estimates (B).
The meeting is adjourned. Enjoy your evening.