:
As you can see, Mr. Chairman, this is a bill containing only one paragraph, but it is worth its weight in gold. There is absolutely no point in having a 100-page bill if, ultimately, it can be summarized in a single paragraph. You will see, as I have, that this one paragraph in Bill C-129 is worth its weight in gold.
Mr. Chairman, I am proud of the fact that a majority of colleagues in the House voted in favour of this bill. That gives us an opportunity to review it in committee and hear today from witnesses who may or may not support it. Our hope is that when the Committee has completed its review of the bill, the vote will be a favourable one, which will give the House of Commons the opportunity to examine the bill at third reading.
Mr. Chairman, like my colleagues and myself, you will note that the bill has three objectives. The first objective of Bill C-429, an Act to Amend the Department of Public Works and Government Services Act (use of wood), is to help the forest industry. I would like to take the time to read that paragraph.
(1.1) Despite subsection (1), before soliciting bids for the construction, maintenance or repair of public works, federal immovables and federal real property, the Minister shall give preference to the concept that promotes the use of wood, while taking into account the cost and greenhouse gas emissions.
Mr. Chairman, as I was saying, although it is short, this bill is worth its weight in gold. It presents three goals, the first and foremost of which is to assist the forest industry, which is currently struggling, through greater use of wood when repairs are made to public works and federal buildings. Furthermore, Mr. Chairman, I imagine that if I asked all the members who are here today and support the idea of helping the forest industry, to raise their hands if they are in favour of passing this bill, I imagine that everyone would do that. If I asked that members raise their hands if they are in favour of the government meeting its greenhouse gas reduction targets, Mr. Chairman, I'm sure you would see that everyone would do that. The fact is that everyone is in favour.
When the government issues a call for tenders with respect to the construction, renovation or maintenance of federal buildings and allows entrepreneurs to use wood as a material, that is free competition. Companies that work with steel are not the only ones that can bid on a building project; there are also companies out there that prefer to work with wood. When there is competition, Mr. Chairman, like myself, you will see that, very often, the work that is carried out is of a very high quality and is performed at a better price.
In closing, Mr. Chairman, I hope that the Committee will fully consider the perspective of witnesses who will be presenting their views—because they are highly qualified to address this and have come a long way. They come from Ontario, British Columbia and all across Canada. The forest industry is not only a concern in Quebec, but all across Ontario, British Columbia and the four corners of the country.
I would like to turn it over now to Ms. Berube, who will make her opening statement.
:
Honourable chair, members of the Standing Committee on Government Operations and Estimates, I'd like to thank you for the opportunity to speak today. This is an important issue for all of us and we want to make sure that everyone is making informed choices.
I represent the Canadian Wood Council and Wood WORKS! The Canadian Wood Council represents the wood products associations across Canada. It takes care of market access and shares codes and standards. Wood WORKS! is a special project that promotes the use of wood in non-residential construction and provides technical support and education to the design communities across Canada.
First, I'd like to let you know that I'm not here to lobby for or against , but rather to educate the MPs who will have to make a strategic decision on why using wood is good.
For the past 10 years, we in Ontario and my colleagues across Canada have been building a wood culture. For a country that depends so heavily on our forest economy, we do not stand up and take pride in our wood products and resources as you see in very many European countries. We have, however, made great progress with many communities across Canada, with specified wood options and buildings that will leave a lasting legacy for many generations. Hospitals, cultural centres, and community centres I can speak for in Ontario. You all are very familiar with the Olympic venues and many projects in B.C. and others across Canada. These are a few that have demonstrated we can build cost-effective, sustainable buildings using Canadian wood products that will last for generations.
Now more than ever, designers and leaders are seeing that wood has a critical role to play in achieving green building mandates. Wood is the only renewable product; wood outperforms other major building materials with regard to life-cycle assessment, or LCA. This is a scientific process for assessing the impact that building materials have on our environment. LCA assesses the impact of materials from extraction through manufacturing, processing, transportation, use on site, maintenance, disposal, and reuse. In some countries, including France and New Zealand, government policy has been put in place to use more wood in public buildings to help them reach the carbon goals. Using wood is good for mitigating climate change, and helps sequester carbon.
In Canada, B.C. has enacted a Wood First Act and Quebec has established policies for using more wood in public buildings. Ontario is currently studying similar policies. I was just yesterday in Toronto, where we're also working on and moving ahead with changing building codes that will permit the use of wood in more buildings.
Over the past two years, Wood WORKS! and the Canadian Wood Council have tried to get the federal government to use wood in some of their buildings, only to find that current policy restricts its usage. It is discouraging to see this type of prejudice against the wood industry. For example, we were working on a project, a forestry service centre in northern Ontario, in Sault Ste. Marie. They were doing a retrofit and they couldn't even get a wood floor in their entranceway because current policy forbids the use of wood, not only structurally but even for interior finishes.
Other perfect examples that have happened have involved mixed-use projects, such as the new hospitals in Ontario. We've made great strides in health care. A North Bay hospital is about to open, and Credit Valley in Mississauga. This is a perfect example whereby wood is featured in public corridors, exterior canopies. Of course, with large buildings, like many of the federal government buildings, you're going to have a lot of areas that cannot use wood, but there are opportunities to use it in public places.
Whatever you decide going forward, we ask that wood be considered on as equal a playing field as other building materials such as steel and concrete. We are not asking for any exclusion of a product. In fact, the use of mixed materials, which includes wood, is very competitive, innovative, and aesthetically pleasing.
Let's leave a lasting legacy and be proud of Canada's forest sector, an industry that is very much the fabric of Canadian culture, while helping to meet our environmental goals.
Thank you.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and thank you, committee.
I thank you on behalf of the members of the Forest Products Association for this opportunity to contribute to your study of Bill .
By way of introduction, the Forest Products Association is Canada's national association representing the forest products industry of Canada. Our members have operations from coast to coast in virtually every province across this country.
The industry, more broadly, is a significant part of the Canadian economy. We represent about 12% of Canada's manufacturing GDP. We directly employ over 200,000 Canadians and another 366,000 or so indirectly. That makes us a significant player in the economy, but also, more importantly, to a number of communities across the country--over 200, to be exact--that are highly dependent on this industry and its well-being.
The past couple of years, as parliamentarians are well aware, have been a particularly challenging period of time for the industry. We've seen our markets go soft quite dramatically. We've arguably been the hardest hit of all industries in the economy. Certainly a number of MPs in the House and some around this table have had constituencies that have been particularly hard hit by the economic downturn of the past couple of years.
We certainly appreciate the strong support we've received from all sides of the House for the industry over the past couple of years as we sort of work through this economic challenge. I'm pleased to say that it does look like there's some light at the end of the tunnel. How quickly we get to that light is still yet to be determined. While economists debate whether or not we're in a “W” or a long “U”, the industry is quickly getting prepared for when markets do return to full strength.
As part of that preparation, we've put in place sort of a four-part strategy. If I might, I'll just walk you through a little bit of that to give you a sense as to where we're going. Part of this bill folds into that overall strategy.
The first part is to make ourselves a little bit more productive and more competitive. The past couple of years have provided the industry the opportunity to restructure and to get leaner and meaner, to use an overused expression.
A second part of it is that we have to continue to improve our environmental performance and leverage that environmental performance in the marketplace, where it's becoming an importantly critical part of our marketing. The industry has done so. In fact, we're one of the leaders in sustainable forestry in the world.
A third important part of our strategy moving forward is the aggressive move into the bio-economy. We have to find ways to maximize the use of the fibre and what we extract out of the forest, and one of the ways we're doing that is moving into the bio-chemical and bio-product field. When we layer that on top of the existing industry structure, we see a very strong and healthy industry and an enormous opportunity ahead.
The fourth part is to make sure that we expand and diversify our markets. We're an enormously dependent industry on exports: $24 billion a year is what we export of what we make. A lion's share of that, obviously, goes down to the U.S. housing market. We've seen what that can do when that market goes south, and that's one of the key reasons we have to diversify and find new markets outside of the U.S. We've done so aggressively and through great support of the Canadian government. We've moved into new marketplaces, such as China, where we're trying to find new ways to build with wood and change cultures.
That's one of our big challenges abroad, changing wood cultures and changing stereotypical thoughts of what wood can be used for. For that reason, we are urging the government to do likewise here in Canada. We need to demonstrate abroad that we as Canadians support the use of wood and understand that wood can be used in new ways that we couldn't possibly use it for before.
As for Bill , we understand that there are some technical challenges to the bill, and if I might, I'll maybe suggest a few places where we could look to improve the bill.
The first one is that the bill makes no mention of where the wood needs to come from. We as a country are great leaders in sustainable and certified forests. We think the bill could use a change that would insist that the wood comes from legal, certified sources. We've seen too much illegal timber enter the marketplace, a large contributor to deforestation around the world, and that has to come to an end. Canada has to show leadership from that standpoint.
The second one, and it's one that Marianne just spoke a bit to, is the national building code. It has not kept pace with the technological developments in wood and the achievements that we've been able to do with wood. It needs to be updated, or modernized if you will.
The third one is to include life-cycle assessment in the choosing of materials for buildings and structures. We need to do a better job of ensuring that our buildings have the least amount of environmental impact possible. If you take a look at the resurgence of wood in the world, a big part of it is because we've now reached new technical achievements with the ability to use wood and the environmental performance of wood. We need to understand that wood--I'll use a transportation analogy--is a Prius, not a horse and buggy.
I would encourage the committee to help educate Canadians, as Marianne was saying, on better ways to use wood. It helps us abroad and it helps us here.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I see that neither you nor Ms. Berube had much to say about the bill itself. You're here advocating on behalf of the forest products industry, the wood industry. I'm certainly very aware of the challenges that the lumber industry is having these days.
I'm not only concerned about the fact that we have the housing situation in the U.S., where there is something like a glut of a million houses available and there's not likely going to be a takeoff in construction of houses in the U.S. anytime soon, which is very important to our lumber mills across Canada and to an awful lot of small communities. Not only that, but there is also the problem when they do get going—when the housing construction sector gets taking off in the U.S. again—you still have the problem now that pulp and paper mills are less active. Fewer people are buying The Washington Post and The New York Times and reading those newspapers, for example. It means that there is less demand for pulp and paper, and therefore the sharing of the cost of bringing the lumber out of the woods is less there. That's more challenging for our lumber industry and makes them a little less competitive. That's an ongoing concern that I'm very aware of, as a former critic on our side for natural resources.
Let me ask you something. This bill would give preference to wood, and that's a real concern to other industries, as you're no doubt aware. We're going to hear from some of those today. Do you think that on all sides...? I think Ms. Berube mentioned the need to put wood on an equal footing, as opposed to a preferred footing. Is there a way to do that?
Secondly, what is the best way for the Government of Canada to support the forestry industry, perhaps without taking jobs away from other industries, which I don't think you want to do?
:
I think that's right. I don't think you want to get into a situation where you're looking at a forestry job as being more important than a steel job or a cement job. I think that's exactly right, Mr. Regan.
To your question, we support the bill because it advocates the use of wood. Are there technical ways to make it better? I'll leave that up to the committee as legislators, but we certainly think that one way to do it is to put everything on a level playing field. The way to do that is through the life-cycle assessment and incorporating that into the decision-making process in terms of choosing materials for your buildings and for your upgrades.
The other part of it of course is one I highlighted in my notes, which is to update or modernize the national building code, which right now doesn't allow structures beyond four stories to be made out of wood. Other parts of the world are doing that; other parts of this country are doing that. We see no reason why you can't. With the engineered woods that we have out there, we can go well beyond; if you look at the Richmond oval in Vancouver that was used for the Olympics, you're spanning a 300-foot span with that.
Wood has gone well beyond where we used to think of it being used for 10 or 15 years ago, and we think the code should reflect those changes.
:
I think it's important that people understand that, when I tabled and sponsored Bill C-429, my goal was not to promote the use of wood to the detriment of steel. Steel certainly has its role to play in the market. But we also want to give wood its rightful place in the market. We simply want to ensure that the sun shines for everyone.
When drawings and specifications are being prepared, we will just be putting another player on the ice; that is what we will tell the forest industry and our sawmills—on the North Shore, in Manicouagan, there are municipalities like Schefferville, Fermont, Havre-Saint-Pierre, Sept-Îles and Baie-Comeau which have mining resources. There are also a lot of sawmills, such as in Rivière-Pentecôte, Rivière-Saint-Jean, Baie-Trinité, Ragueneau and Forestville, which are closed.
To answer the member's question, I would say that the government will come out a winner once it has created a structure and lumber suppliers can bid, in the same way that steel suppliers can. And when there is market competition, we should end up with better quality and a better price.
I have just come back from Geneva, and that is the reason why I arrived a little late. There a UN committee is working on environmental construction rules and discussing exactly the same issues that have been raised here.
Every country in the world knows, as a result of the 2007 IPCC report, that when wood replaces concrete or steel, greenhouse gas emissions are reduced. What is currently being negotiated is the sequestration of wood products—in other words, the carbon found in wood. Those negotiations will take place in Cancun. Everyone agreed on the science, and now begins the political process to secure acceptance of carbon credits for sequestration. So, in South Africa, it is quite possible that there will be another ton of emissions when wood products are used.
The procedure differs from one country to the next. Some countries have strict policies: wood is included and the volume is calculated to determine the emission level. Other countries are softer. For example, what is proposed here is very soft, in my opinion. If words like “reduce the environmental footprint of public buildings” is too tough, you can use any words you like, because the result will be the same. It is important for Canada to play a leadership role, since we are in fact a wood producer.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for being with us this morning to explain this very important piece of legislation, for both Canada and Quebec. I take great pride in the fact that the Bloc Québécois was the party that proposed this bill.
I think it's a shame that my NDP colleague is away today, because if we are talking about wood, we are necessarily talking about wood for framing, about finished lumber, and about carpenters. I believe that my NDP colleague was a carpenter, and I am certain that he would understand the importance of what you are proposing this morning.
As regards the bill and our discussion of it here in Committee, the argument that has been heard repeatedly—and I quote from the summary here—is that this will “give preference to the concept that promotes the use of wood”. It is the expression “give preference” that seems to scare a lot of people sitting at this table.
Could one of you possibly explain that the expression “give preference to”—and I'm not sure whether the English translation elicits the same kind of fearful reaction—does not mean that wood will be used ahead of any other product, but rather, that wood will be on an equal footing with other products? As I see it, that is the important point here.
:
To answer that question, I have to tell you what I have done in life. I was an architect for 50 years. I am now an honorary member of the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada. I began in 1954, at McGill. Just to follow up on what Mr. Asselin said, which is that we want to put a new player on the ice, I would say that in the 1960s, wood was on an equal footing with other types of materials. So, there is nothing new in this. We are simply acknowledging that wood is a normal structural material or finish.
To specifically answer Ms. Bourgeois' question, I would say that, in the construction industry, it is perfectly normal to have a preference for a particular material. When the Canadian Parliament was built, stone was the preferred material. The decision was not to use just any outside cladding—such as brick; no, stone was the preferred material. When the floors of this room were designed, wood was the preferred material, as it was for the panels covering these walls. So, in the construction industry, it is perfectly normal to determine in advance the materials that you want to use. There is nothing new in that; that is the way it has always been.
Indeed, it is the same thing for steel. Developers may decide that the building will be made of steel or wood. So, as you see, the expressing “give preference to”, which is used in the bill, is not contrary to current practice. It is normal, under current practice--
:
Absolutely. Wood is just as strong. When calculating what is needed for a wood construction, the resistance must meet the requirements in terms of the weight to be supported on and in the building. So, whether it is made of wood, steel or concrete, the structure is designed based on the support that is required, as calculated.
Recently, I was in the United States, in Glasgow in the State of Maine, where I saw large wooden buildings that are 140 years old and don't have a single crack in them. The structure has remained intact, there has been no sagging or anything of the sort. So, wood is just as tough a material and actually has a higher fire resistance than other materials. It is also a material that doesn't deteriorate, which can remain in place as long as any other type of structure and which is environmental, in the sense that this is a renewable resource, since trees grow back. In fact, if you don't use a tree once it has reached full maturity, you will lose it—it rots.
In Canada, we have a large number of trees that have reached full maturity. If we don't use them, we will simply lose them, which is not the case for steel—given that it is derived from an ore—or for concrete, which is produced using large amounts of energy.
:
That's exactly the point I want to get to here, Mr. Casey.
I'm wondering if you could add some clarification, then. You are supportive of the wood industry, as am I. I come from an area that is a lumber-producing community.
What this bill presents to me is a threat to our international markets. Let's look at the specific wording of the bill. It calls for a preferential treatment for a specific type of building material. In the trade agreements...and you guys are experts on these. In the trade agreements, including the internal trade articles of 504(2) and 504(3)(b), including NAFTA agreements, including the WTO--all of these make it absolutely clear that any specific preferential treatment given by the Government of Canada is in contravention of these agreements.
We have a huge possibility to lose a huge market if this bill is passed as is. I am going to vote against this bill in defence of the lumber industry, in defence of the forest product industry that I represent.
I need to know--because we're here to hear about this specific bill, the wording of this bill--do you support a bill that in its wording would actually contravene our trade agreements, and the impacts that might flow out of that? You and I know very well that the United States is looking for any excuse to shut our border. Would you support a bill that would be seen as protectionist and would then limit our access to an international market?
:
Well, thank you. I'm actually tempted to follow up on what my colleague Chris was raising, but I'd like to begin with a bit of a preamble.
It seems to me you've brought to the table.... The leading authorities of the industry are with us here today. But it seems to me that there are things that we could....
You know, in the best interests of the lumber industry, etc., this is a relatively minor point. We have bigger fish to fry and bigger problems to deal with than the moulding and the trim around the decorative use of wood in some of our government buildings.
Now, I say this as a certified journeyman carpenter by trade. I used to be the head of the carpenters union, I worked in three sawmills, and I worked for the forest service for four years, so I have an affection and an affinity for the use of lumber and the use of wood. My first reaction when I saw this bill was how can we possibly dictate the use of building materials for Public Works? It seemed ridiculous to me. But I understand it better now, having listened to some of the arguments put forward.
I, too, have been concerned that if we're using all of this energy, the combined might of the whole industry, to push for something, we'd be better off promoting platform framing in Japan or someplace where they need a lot of homes built, or trying to redraft the catastrophic softwood lumber agreement with the United States to protect ourselves from tariffs and things.
This is the Parliament of Canada. We really shouldn't be seized of the issue of what kind of flooring we're going to put into the next public building that we build. It's almost insulting, frankly, for us to be using our time on this. I mean, are we going to have a private members' bill to dictate what kind of curtains we put in the next building we build? I'm starting to get frustrated with this.
There's a second thing, too. I understand that the logging industry, lumber industry, ranges from among the most responsible industries in the world to the most irresponsible industries in the world. It covers that whole spectrum. I've seen clear-cut logging, as we call it, in Canada, and I'm also well aware that we're defoliating the rain forests so we can get rosewood, decorative timbers, etc.
This committee should probably be looking at a sustainable future, in terms of using inorganic materials instead of organic materials to build with. I'm a carpenter by trade, I made my living for all of my adult life and I raised a family working with wood, but I'm ready to concede that wood, by its very nature, begins to decompose the minute you cut it down. This whole planet has a tiny thin layer of life on it. The ecstatic layer of the planet is so thin and so vulnerable that we could build our buildings with what's beneath that ecstatic layer. It doesn't decompose and we don't have to eliminate habitat, etc.
If we were talking big picture, about a sustainable future, we wouldn't be talking about a better way to cut down more trees and build with material that begins to rot the moment you use it. We would be talking about a way to build things without....
At any rate, I hope we can deal with this quickly and move major amendments to this bill so that it doesn't interfere with our trade relations. And maybe--maybe, as there's really no room in legislation to dictate this kind of thing anyway--we could advise the government to consider the advantages of using wood domestically, when it's appropriate, but that's about as far as I would go.
:
I have two quick points.
Mr. Martin, your concern for the sort of overall environmental impact is exactly right, and that's why we say let's go after the life-cycle assessment and get that into the process. We will go up against any other building product out there, and gladly do so, and we will beat it based on science, as Monsieur Labbé pointed out.
The second point is that we're not talking about panelling. We're talking about major structures. We're doing a lot of marketing out there in the world. Our biggest markets are out in China and, as you said, in Japan. One of the things we're running up against is educating people, changing cultures. One of the best ways we can do that is to change our culture here to demonstrate that we support the industry that way.
:
Thank you for being here this morning.
[English]
Thank you for coming here this morning. We certainly appreciate the opportunity to talk to you and speak to you about this bill.
We're very supportive of the forestry industry, and I'm glad to hear about some of the changes you've made, some of the new practices that you're trying to implement to ensure a vibrant industry, so thank you for that.
I have a number of questions.
First, Madam Berube, you said that current policy restricts the usage of wood. You said at the very beginning of your discourse that you were not here to lobby for this bill particularly but because you want people to make informed choices, because the current policy restricts the usage of wood. You talked about the changes that might be required to the national building code and to other things. Could you just elaborate on that for a moment?
Mr. Casey, you talked about the fact that you'd like to have a level playing field. I think that was your term, a level playing field, and that was really your concern.
There are some technical challenges with the bill. You talked about how you want to have legal, certified sources.
I'm getting the sense that really what you're looking for is what Madam Berube just said: you're looking more for that level playing field, changes to the Canadian building code, using life-cycle assessment, and so on. Could you elaborate on that as well?
:
Thank you, Mr. Chair. I'll try to be quick, because I do need to get out a number of points.
First, I'm going to read from the international trade articles. It states that documents can contain specific requirements for particular materials when required for technical or operational reasons, but “the biasing of technical specifications in favour of, or against, particular goods or services, including those goods or services included in construction contracts” is prohibited. You can reference the trade agreements.
Then, in the WTO agreements, it makes it very clear that the preference for wood in tenders, in the absence of technical reasons, would be an unnecessary obstacle to trade.
So what I am suggesting is that we have a bill right now that has a good intent. It has a good intent to promote wood. I come from a lumber-producing area. Let me tell you that there'd be nothing greater for me than to be able to go home and tell my folks to open up the mills, to fire everything up because we're going to build every federal government building with wood. It's not going to happen, though. In fact, if we were in contravention of the trade agreements, we would shut down all the mills that are currently open.
I think what I'd like to know, Mr. Casey and Ms. Berube, is this. If in fact this would impact international trade agreements, is this a correct way to go? Or would you prefer that this committee look at levelling the playing field for wood at the national level, if we as a committee were to look at the national building code and something like that? Because let me be absolutely clear: if this bill passes this committee and becomes law, you have to live with all of the impacts, including the possible shutting down of international trade agreements. So will you live with that if in fact that's what this bill does?
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
As you heard, my name is Michael Atkinson. I am president of the Canadian Construction Association. I'm here today not only in that capacity, but also as a member of the Coalition for Fair Construction Practices. Joining me this morning are three other members of our coalition: Mr. Gary Sturgeon, technical services engineer for the Canadian Concrete Masonry Producers Association, who will also be speaking before you today; Mr. Ed Whalen, president of Canadian Institute of Steel Construction; and Ms. Marina de Souza, managing director of the Canadian Concrete Masonry Producers Association. Since our concerns are very similar, Mr. Sturgeon and I have agreed to combine our statements and our time.
Our coalition consists of 20 members representing the steel, cement, concrete, concrete product, brick, and masonry industrial sectors. Collectively we represent hundreds of thousands of jobs and workers from every community in this country, 1.2 million in the construction industry alone. Combined, we account for billions of dollars in domestic sales, exports, and construction services in Canada every year. Again, construction alone accounts for just under 7% of Canada's gross domestic product.
Many of the heads and senior executives of the coalition members are here with us today. This large and varied group has come together to oppose the passage of this bill because it would: one, favour wood over other construction materials, which is not only discriminatory but could increase construction costs by limiting the types of materials available for use on federal projects; two, limit the design freedom of construction professionals in the selection of materials; three, potentially undermine the National Building Code of Canada; and four, possibly violate Canada's obligations under domestic and international trade agreements.
To begin, I think it's important to state that all of the members of our coalition support a healthy Canadian wood industry. Wood, steel, brick, concrete, and other construction materials, are vital to construction in Canada. Together these materials and their associated industries offer synergy. All contribute to providing Canada's sustainable social and commercial environments. Like the wood industry, coalition industries are located in small towns and communities across this country, and have been hard hit by the economic events of the past two years and continue to struggle with declining demand in both domestic and traditional export markets.
To be clear on this point, the Canadian Construction Association and the coalition oppose Bill . We do not oppose the wood forestry industry. Assuredly, we would have been here today united to oppose the bill had it otherwise been written to favour any particular building material. The fact that it is wood is immaterial.
To my first point, the federal government is a significant purchaser of construction materials across this country. As such, its activities affect the national economy and can influence both the price and the availability of goods and services, including construction services, within the marketplace. Furthermore, decisions of Public Works and Government Services Canada on procurement practices often influence not only the practices of other levels of government, but also those of the private sector. Therefore, the impact of any change in federal procurement policy must be viewed through that lens.
We believe it is neither good nor acceptable public policy for our governments to promote one building material--in this case wood--by excluding alternative, viable, and competitive Canadian materials from Canadian construction markets. We strongly believe that all construction materials should operate on a level playing field and in a competitive, fair, and open economic environment.
Specific to the federal government, proposed Bill is philosophically contrary to the performance and procurement policies and methods currently followed by the Department of Public Works and Government Services Canada that actively promote and ensure openness, fairness, and transparency. If enacted, we believe that Bill C-429 would eliminate these fundamental qualities within our built environment. Bill C-429 would effectively legislate advantage, protection, and gain for the wood industry at the expense of other supplier industries to the construction industry. Ultimately, if enacted, it would assuredly not create any new jobs.
I move now to our second objection. Bill will limit and undermine the freedom of a design professional or experienced contractor to select the most appropriate construction material for its intended function and service.
Legislation that compels or influences our design professionals to specify the preferred product for use where it is not suited to the function or service has attendant risks. Consequences include an increased likelihood of non-performance, premature failure, and higher initial costs for construction or ongoing costs for repair and maintenance.
The selection of the appropriate building material must remain the purview of those qualified and licensed to practise in the area of building design and construction.
The Canadian built environment is founded on this principle. Our slogan is, “Choose the right building material for the right job”. With no artificial preference currently in place in the design and construction industry, the right material for the right job is already being selected.
With that, I would now like to turn to Mr. Sturgeon to expand on our other comments.
:
Mr. Chairman, I also want to thank you and the committee for the opportunity to speak with you today.
Let me begin by building on Mr. Atkinson's comments about material selection and specification, and the relation of Bill to the National Building Code of Canada.
The motto of the National Building Code of Canada serves as the basis for specifying materials, testing, design, and construction. The National Building Code of Canada is an objective-based code.
Unlike a prescriptive-based code, the objective-based code is specifically intended to facilitate the selection and use of any and all materials that satisfy its stated objectives and performance requirements. It's specifically intended not to limit the application and use of any material component or assembly. Whereas the objective-based National Building Code of Canada is inclusive, a “wood first” policy is exclusive by its very nature. Bill could undermine the effectiveness and credibility of the National Building Code of Canada.
A wood first policy is intended to influence a designer's choice of construction material. Simply, a designer is encouraged to select wood. Wood becomes the prescribed preference. In effect, Bill positions wood as the performance benchmark against which all other materials and assemblies will be measured, contrasted, compared, and judged for use in selection. Ultimately, this will adversely affect the development of performance requirements in the National Building Code of Canada by virtually substituting the properties of wood as the performance targets.
This is assuredly not desirable, and effectively caps material and assembly performance to equivalency with those of wood, undermines the spirit of competition to achieve higher performances through research and development, and subordinates and marginalizes other preferred properties not characterized by wood.
Canadian building codes have effectively served the needs and expectations of Canadians for over 60 years. The coalition is steadfast in its belief that Canadian building codes already provide the needed flexibility for design professionals to appropriately select construction materials. The very fact that our building codes prescribe certain conditions under which construction materials, including wood, cannot be used is evidence that no material is always the most appropriate choice.
Publicly funded construction should respect our Canadian building codes, their philosophy for development, system for development, content application, and credibility. A policy for preferential choice of a particular building material does not respect these.
This brings us to our fourth point for consideration: a free marketplace. There are significant legal and trade implications that we believe Bill cannot avoid. In the interest of time today, I think this was well vetted in the earlier presentations. I think this group has a good understanding of the contraventions that this bill could propose for international trade agreements and domestic trade agreements.
As a final discussion today, we're compelled to address some of the claims made about the sustainable attributes of wood. Certainly, it's a positive step for governments to increasingly demand that buildings and infrastructure be constructed and operated in a more sustainable manner. It's our observation and opinion that all industries that manufacture materials and components for construction are rapidly greening their processes and better respecting principles of sustainability.
Some proponents of Bill argue that wood is a preferred environmental building material because of its carbon sequestration attributes and because wood products require comparatively less fossil fuel to manufacture. While these material attributes are positive, alone they provide a very limited picture of whole building sustainability. Only a life-cycle assessment of the environmental impact of a whole building over its full service life can identify all attributes that potentially offset greenhouse gases and underscore the real carbon cost.
The honourable members have copies of the presentations. Again, in the interest of time I'll summarize.
Life-cycle analysis provides a complete picture. It requires careful and detailed work by the building sustainability and scientific communities. This type of research has led to the emergence, development, and indeed application and practice of advanced and comprehensive design specifications, and guidelines found in such programs as LEED and other green building programs. A wood first policy undermines their development and use.
In conclusion, we can all agree we want our economy to get moving again and we want all Canadian building products to be more widely used. However, all members of the Coalition for Fair Construction Practices believe that no construction material or assembly should be awarded a legislated priority over others. Let professional judgment, practical application, fair competition, and respect for our building code system determine the best materials for the application and service.
All of the members of the Coalition for Fair Construction Practices express strong disapproval with Bill . Honourable government and opposition members of this committee, we respectfully request that Bill C-429, or any such similar legislation, be not recommended for consideration by the House of Commons.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and honourable members of the committee.
My name is Gael Mourant, and I am president and CEO of ARXX Building Products, based in Cobourg, Ontario. I'd like to thank the committee for the opportunity to appear before you and provide some insight with respect to Bill .
Our company is a leading supplier of insulating concrete forms, also known as ICFs, an innovative green building material. ICFs represent Canadian technology that is being successfully exported to many parts of the world. Our wall assemblies are highly energy efficient, fire-resistant, can withstand tornado and hurricane force winds, can be engineered for the highest seismic zones, are resistant to rot, mold, and mildew, and meet the U.S. federal government design criteria for minimum anti-terrorism standards.
I'm not here to advocate for one construction material over another. I'm here to say that Canadian public policy should support innovation that achieves critical goals for our society such as the reduced cost of construction and operation of buildings--including government buildings--higher energy efficiency, and support for the development of--and investment in--emerging Canadian companies, industries, and technology.
Through providing preference for wood, Bill C-429 is at odds with these objectives and can result in unintended consequences. Bill C-429 advocates convention over innovation. Conventional building methods and materials need to adapt and change in order to improve energy efficiency and save natural resources. According to McKinsey & Company, energy efficiency in built form represents some of the lowest cost abatement alternatives for greenhouse gas emissions.
There's no question that wood plays an important role as a construction material. But in the same way that wood construction materials have evolved through innovation from conventional lumber to engineered wood products, there is a need for continued innovation in building materials to meet the challenges of achieving cost-effective energy-efficient construction. Wood may not always represent the best alternative, and the choice of building material and method should be left in the hands of building scientists and professionals.
Fundamentally, though, natural resources, like taxpayers' funds, are scarce resources. Government policy should seek to maximize the opportunity to reduce the cost of ownership of public buildings and minimize the impact on the environment.
Bill moves Canada at odds with the EU and the U.S. in terms of recognizing the importance of energy efficiency in federally owned and publicly funded buildings. In fact the enactment of the U.S. Energy Independence and Security Act, which requires all U.S. federal buildings to achieve a 55% reduction in energy use by 2010 and a 100% reduction by 2030, has opened up new opportunities for our company. We expect to complete two projects for the U.S. military later this year.
It is unfortunate, as a company based in Canada, to have opportunities outside Canada driven by public policy initiatives, yet stifled within Canada by public policy initiatives such as Bill C-429.
Bill C-429 sends the wrong message to investors in clean tech. Our company is owned by three major venture capital investors in clean tech and green building materials, two of whom are based in the U.S. and one who is based in Switzerland. Our investors have over $2 billion in investments in clean tech.
We have successfully brought tens of millions of dollars of investment to Canada, supporting Canadian jobs, technology, and business. Canada should demonstrate that government policy supports investment in companies in Canada offering innovative solutions to global energy, resource, and environmental problems.
Investors do not expect protectionist policies to thwart the commercialization of emerging technology. They expect a level playing field. Bill C-429 flies in the face of this and can make it more difficult for companies in Canada to attract investment for developing energy-efficient and cost-effective means and methods for construction.
Bill represents a threat to jobs in other sectors. The manufacture and supply of ICFs employ thousands of Canadians. For example, Vaudreuil, Quebec, has two plants in that city. Granby, Quebec, has four plants. There's an ICF manufacturer based in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, with two plants in the Atlantic provinces. Ontario, Alberta, and British Columbia have multiple plants making ICFs. This does not include the plastic injection moulding facilities, the tool and die moulders, and the transportation providers and thousands of building materials distributors and ICF installers who all look to ICF as a means of growing and developing their businesses.
ICFs are manufactured in plastic and foam-moulding facilities, many of which have had to turn to new products like ICFs in order to maintain volumes as reduction in volumes from automotive and packaging materials have threatened their businesses.
:
Good morning and thank you for the invitation to appear. I wasted no time answering it.
I would like to begin by saying that I do not appear before the Committee today with the intention of denigrating other construction materials. Rather, I am here to talk about the advantages and benefits of wood as a construction material, particularly in public buildings.
Furthermore, my participation today should not be seen as in any way partisan; rather it is intended as a constructive contribution addressed to all members of Parliament represented in the House of Commons.
Wood is considered to be the most environmental material of all, something which is prompting governments to promote it.
The Coalition BOIS Québec, for instance, which was supported by the two levels of government, carried out an awareness campaign on the uses of wood in not only the residential sector, but the commercial and industrial sectors as well. That campaign, whose spokespersons were the very well-known environmentalist, Steven Guilbeault, Assistant General Coordinator of the Équiterre group, Claudette Carbonneau, from the CSN central union body, and Alain Lemaire, from Cascades Papers, who is also a very well-known industrialist from Quebec, has had a real impact.
For several years now, governments have been talking a great deal about global warming and greenhouse gas reduction. And it's great to hear them talk about it. Now, however, the House of Commons has an opportunity to walk the talk by passing a bill that would allow us to capture greenhouse gas emissions by using wood, and to do so for dozens, and perhaps even hundreds, of years.
In addition, there would be nothing revolutionary about this at a global level, since many European countries are already advocating the use of wood for the construction of public buildings, by setting a minimum percentage of wood to be used for the construction of their own buildings.
Furthermore, I think it's time to take this opportunity to respond to certain completely false allegations which are clearly tendentious and misleading. The forest industry is not asking for any government grants. We are asking the government to set an appropriate minimum standard for the use of wood in the construction of public buildings.
The age-old fearmongering strategy has already surfaced in our industry. We are now told that it's a dangerous material in cases of fire or earthquakes, and so on, and I have just heard more of the same. Basically, everything is dangerous. There again, I have to say that this is absolutely false. Wooden structures resist fire longer than some built with other materials, and that has been tested not only in Quebec and Canada, but also in the United States.
I would add that, in terms of the visual environment, wood is a far more attractive and pleasant looking material than many others. Some examples that come to mind are Gene-H.-Kruger Hall at Laval University, the Chauveau soccer stadium in Quebec City and the skating oval that is part of the Olympic facilities in British Columbia.
I would also like to add that one of my groups is returning from Sweden, where they have begun to build bridges with wood beams. These bridges are guaranteed to have the same longevity as viaducts built with other materials. There are now more than 100 of them. So, let's set aside the taboos, look at what is being done around the world and open our eyes.
The forest industry represents more than 525,000 jobs in Canada and has every right to expect that the government and all political parties represented in the House of Commons will provide some support for such an initiative.
Where we're from, there is an expression in French we often hear, which may seem a little crude, but that I would like to use anyway, and which is that the boots have to follow the lips or walk the talk. What does that mean? It means that you cannot be saying one thing and doing another. It means there has to be some consistency between our actions and what we preach, recommend and advocate.
Now every leader of every political party in Canada has a chance to demonstrate that consistency between their actions and what they're saying in public. Yes, we are experiencing global warming; everyone knows that. So why not seize the opportunity to improve our environmental record? This is what we are offering.
Our industry, which has been pretty well abandoned in the economic crisis we have just been through, deserves a little bit of attention. This bill can be amended. That decision rests with you, not me.
Rather than talking about priorities, we should be talking about equity or I don't know what. We await the evidence.
Wood is a renewable resource and the most environmentally friendly material of all. Here in Canada, it generates jobs and is an economic engine in every one of the resource regions of this country.
In closing, I would just like to say that it is a renewable resource--
Thank you for accommodating us out here on the west coast via video conference. It certainly helps reduce greenhouse gas emissions in that I didn't have to fly to Ottawa.
I'm Rick Jeffery, president and CEO of Coast Forest Products Association. We represent 24 companies on the coast of British Columbia, with over 12,000 employees.
I also wear two hats here, though. I am the chair of the Canada Wood group. We're responsible for ensuring market access and market promotion of Canadian wood products in global markets offshore. Our membership is located across Quebec, Ontario, Alberta, and B.C. We represent most of the companies there and over 200,000 employees.
I'd like to speak in favour of Bill for a number of reasons. First, it creates an opportunity to support the domestic forest industry and create jobs in communities across our country.
Second, the use of wood in construction can contribute to greenhouse gas reductions, carbon management, and climate change. As we say in the industry, “Tackle climate change: use wood”.
Third, it provides us with the opportunity to demonstrate the value of using wood in construction. Just a few of the attributes of wood are its energy efficiency, carbon storage, seismic performance, cost-effectiveness, strength, durability, and aesthetic beauty.
What I would say to you is that, in the demonstration context, this bill is very important for us. As Mr. Chevrette just indicated, Canada needs to walk the talk. I'd like to tell you a story about that. We are actively promoting the use of wood in construction in China. In order for us to be able to do that, we have to be able to demonstrate to the Chinese--who build, by the way, eight million to ten million housing units a year--that we indeed also use wood in our construction techniques.
The best story we have on that front is that over 50% of the housing units in China are six-floor walk-ups. When we told the Chinese that they should be building these buildings out of wood, they said, “Well, show us.” Lo and behold, we didn't have a six-floor building code here in Canada. So in British Columbia, we adopted a six-floor building code, much like Washington State and Oregon have, in order for us to be able to demonstrate to China that you can indeed use wood for these things. So we need to build with wood if we expect other people in our key markets to also build with wood. Canada must be a leader in this regard.
I'd like to talk about some of the allegations that are levelled against this thing, and do this from a B.C. context. As you may know, the B.C. government has instituted a “wood first” policy. Over a dozen of our municipalities have followed suit. We have no unintended consequences or market influences that are causing problems for other building material suppliers. Allegations that wood increases costs are quite unfounded. As we see the price of concrete and steel rise, as a matter of fact the converse is true: wood is becoming a much more cost-effective building material.
People say that wood is not safe. The use of wood is subject to national and international standards. That's some of the work we do with the Canada Wood group on building codes in Japan, China, Korea, and those kinds of places so wood can be used safely. Wood is a strong material.
It has not wiped out jobs in other building materials industries here in British Columbia. It has not created bankruptcies or distorted market prices. None of these things have happened. We have that experience here in B.C.
I'd like to also note that the proof is in the pudding on this stuff. I'd like to give you an example of what this kind of wood first policy can do.
We have two iconic buildings here that were showcased to the world during the 2010 Olympics, in which all Canadians showed great pride.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman.
Thank you, witnesses, for being with us today.
Mr. Atkinson, you're here on behalf of the construction industry, so let me ask you this. There is a concern, I think, across the country, particularly in small rural communities, lumber communities, that have been suffering because of the downturn, particularly in the U.S. housing construction market. They've also been affected by the downturn in pulp and paper. A lot of jobs have been lost, and there's a concern about that. There's also a concern about encouraging the export of wood products to places like China, as we just heard from Mr. Jeffery.
Do you see a way in which the Government of Canada can legitimately support the lumber industry as it goes through these difficult times? As well, what are your thoughts on the suggestions we've heard about the national building code?
:
First of all, it's a bit like déjà vu all over again, as Yogi Berra said. We were before the Senate committee on agriculture and forestry, which was looking at exactly the kinds of questions you are looking at--i.e., how to enhance the use of wood products in the non-residential construction industry. They were taking a very general comprehensive look at what needed to be done. They were looking at the building code and they were looking at the need for more R and I in the industry, etc.
I think those were positive steps. They were talking and consulting with the industry at large about how best to proceed, how best to help the forest industry along, without it being in a situation where they were setting them up against other building suppliers. So I think that's number one.
The Senate committee spent several months looking at this issue, and one of the things we said to them was, yes, look at those areas. There is already a process in place, a very clear process, on how to change the Canada building code. The Canadian building code itself to a great degree doesn't have any force and effect until adopted by other jurisdictions, but there is a process in place by which to make changes through that process, to have them critiqued by experts, by scientists, by researchers, etc.
:
Okay. Thank you very much.
Mr. Sturgeon, you're here on behalf of the concrete industry, if I'm not mistaken. I'll ask you, and I'll also ask Ms. Mourant, about the suggestion we heard from the mover of the bill and from the forest industry that they're looking to be on an equal footing.
What would your view be of this bill if, rather than saying that the minister shall give preference to wood, etc., it says that the minister shall give “consideration”?
Does that change your view of this bill?
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen.
My first question is addressed to Mr. Chevrette. Mr. Jeffery may want to add his own comments afterwards.
Mr. Chevrette, you said that several European countries are using wood to build their buildings and that several governments are also promoting wood. You referred to Sweden and other European countries. Would you say that those countries are all unaware of international law and the fact that certain rights could be violated under certain agreements?
Before you answer, I would just like to mention that someone made that point. In your opinion, is it possible that Bill C-429, which priorizes wood based on cost and the potential for greenhouse gas reduction, would violate these international agreements?
I'd like to thank all of our guests for what I believe are very thoughtful presentations today.
As I've reviewed and heard your comments today, let me say, first, I think the intention behind the bill is very sincere. I think we would all acknowledge that there are challenges in the forestry industry. In that respect, I do believe that what Bill is intended to do is to highlight the challenges that are reflected in the industry. But in my opinion, from what I've seen, there are flaws in this bill.
I sit on the Standing Committee for International Trade. One of your representatives, who was one of our guests in the first hour of testimony, talked about the importance of the forestry industry in terms of exports worldwide.
Mr. Jeffery, thank you for being here through video link. You may have not been privy to some of the information that was presented in the first hour. As I heard your comments, you talked about the importance of wood; you talked about trying to demonstrate to the Chinese the importance. But it's rather interesting that when I look at the concerns that I would have on this, as a member of international trade, in complying with this kind of legislation—were it to become law—we would contravene Canada's procurement obligations under international and, for that matter, domestic agreements. That does include issues relating to NAFTA, the WTO Agreement on Government Procurement. We actually have some advice that preferences for wood and tenders would be considered terrific obstacles to trade were we to be challenged in a Canadian international trade tribunal. We deem that to be very serious for the sake of the forestry industry.
By the way, Mr. Jeffery, as part of background, you may or may not be aware--and I hope that you are--that the Government of Canada, over the last several years, has invested something in excess of $1.5 billion to support wood programs in the forestry industry. Even things like $400 million, which relates to our competitiveness in the forestry sector, even $100 million spent on pine beetle eradication...there's a lot of support in that $1.5 billion plus, supporting development, commercialization, and implementation of advanced technologies in the forestry sector.
My concern is that in light of the challenges that would happen internationally to us, Mr. Jeffery, in terms of the potential to sacrifice our forestry exports, is this the bill you'd want us to go forward with, sir?
:
Mr. Jeffery, I'm sorry to interrupt, but the time is limited.
I'll quote this prohibition for you from the Agreement on Internal Trade:
the biasing of technical specifications in favour of, or against, particular goods or services, including those goods or services included in construction contracts
That comes from articles 504(2) and 504(3)(b). I appreciate, of course, that I have that in front of me and you don't.
We have more specifics: NAFTA article 1007(1), which talks about “unnecessary obstacles to trade”, and the WTO Agreement on Government Procurement, article VI(I).
I think it's fairly clear, sir, that this creates great impediments for our forestry industry nationally to be able to export. You might reference something else, but I have grave concerns for the sake of the greater good of the Canadian forestry industry.
Any comment on that?
Given that the federal government is one of the major purchasers of construction industry services, I think the only thing our committee or members of Parliament should be concerned about is getting the best value for the construction dollar invested. Other regional concerns or industry sector concerns should be dealt with as policy matters for the government, but not legislated. I keep getting caught up on that.
Mr. Atkinson, in your report I think you used language that I would use. You pointed out that it shouldn't be a legislated matter: “no construction material...should be awarded a legislated priority over others”. I can't disagree.
But I'm also sympathetic. It seems that the wood producers and the forest industry claim that they don't have an equal footing, that the government isn't allowed to consider the use of wood in building projects. That is what I understood from some of the presentations.
Is it your understanding that there is a bias against using wood, as opposed to an equal opportunity for building materials? Is there any evidence of this?
Thank you to each and every one of the witnesses. Thank you particularly to Mr. Jeffery, who got up a bit early just to join us.
Colleagues, I'm going to continue with the meeting but will ask the witnesses to leave.
As you can see, we have less than 30 seconds of our allotted time left. I may be able to have some discretion in running over for a moment.
Colleagues, we are at the end of our allotted day for this particular bill. We are ready for clause-by-clause. I also have a motion before me from the Conservative Party for a 30-day extension. I also have an amendment put forward by Mr. Martin on this item.
The chair is therefore in your hands as to how we proceed with this particular bill at this time. I am open to suggestions. We could deal with the amendment first. You could introduce yourself, read the amendment into the record, and give us your opinion on it.
I suppose the first question, ladies and gentlemen, is whether we go to clause-by-clause at this time. Is there any point in debate, or should we just vote on whether we go to clause-by-clause at this time?
Go ahead, Mr. Warkentin.
:
Mr. Chair, at the risk of dragging this out, I believe we've heard a number of different testimonies today that have raised grave concerns about aspects of this bill. I think we need some recommendations from international trade lawyers. I think it's also important that we hear from third-party folks who have analyzed the wording of this bill. I think there are some technical issues with regard to this piece of legislation that need to be fully explored.
Therefore, I think it's important that I move my motion to give an extension for the consideration of this bill so that we might be able to do our job in an effective way to ensure that we're protecting the forests sector but that we're not impacting the international trade agreements that we have signed as a country.
My biggest fear is that this bill moves from this place and, for political reasons, gets approved in the House, and becomes legislation, and it impacts far worse the trade agreements as it relates to wood than any benefit that might be realized from this bill.
So that's my concern. I think it's important that we fully explore that and fully understand the impacts this bill may have.
:
We therefore have a motion, which is to ask for an extension from the House.
Mr. Chris Warkentin: That's right.
The Chair: Does everyone understand that? Is there any other debate on that point?
Those in favour of the motion? Those against the motion?
(Motion agreed to)
The Chair: The chair rules in favour of the motion, and the reason is that the speaker always rules in favour of extension of debate, and this is a motion for extension of debate. That may be, however, the last time the chair rules on this matter in favour of the mover.
I therefore interpret the motion as carried, and we will formally ask the House for an extension of debate.
Thank you.
The meeting is adjourned.