The sound checks have been done. Everything is good.
For the benefit of the interpreters, I say to the witnesses that we have to be careful about noise levels that could harm the interpreters' hearing, so please do not hit the stem of your microphone. When you are not speaking, please turn off your mic. If you're not using your earpiece, please put the earpiece on that round sticker, which looks like a coaster, in front of you.
We're very pleased today to welcome the Minister of Environment and Climate Change.
I believe, Minister, you have a 10-minute opening statement. Is that correct? The floor is yours, and we look forward to hearing what you have to say.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Honourable colleagues, thank you for the invitation to discuss the boreal caribou situation in Quebec.
Boreal caribou are an indicator species for the overall health of the boreal forest. Their decline is considered to be a “canary in the coal mine”, an indication that the boreal forest ecosystem is degrading. It has long been understood that this ecosystem is important not only to the health of caribou but to the health of our air, our water, our climate and our economy.
Quebec and Canada's natural abundance is deeply rooted in our culture and is part of our folklore. We all enjoy the free benefits and services it provides. Every day, these services include clean air, moderation during heat waves, filtering our water, commonly known as blue gold in Quebec, and carbon capture. Of course, it also supports economies such as lumber, pulp and paper, biomass and so on. However, these numerous services and benefits cannot be taken for granted. It is our collective responsibility to safeguard the health of our ecosystems, since we continue to benefit from all the abundance and opportunities that nature has to offer.
As you know, Canada hosted the world in Montreal in December 2022, at the United Nations Conference on Biodiversity, COP15. Thanks to the leadership provided by Canada and its allies, a new Global Framework for Biodiversity was adopted. It's worth mentioning that the Quebec government endorsed it and pledged to contribute to the global goals of protecting at least 30% of land and oceans by 2030 and curbing the decline of biodiversity.
We often congratulate Quebec on its environmental and social leadership, which includes carbon pricing—an essential policy for any climate plan—and for stimulating innovation in a green economy, transport electrification, day care and many others. Unfortunately, some of these successes are overshadowed by a long-standing failure. It was in response to that failure that the federal government began the process of developing a protection order to conserve the habitat of three caribou herds in Quebec whose recovery is facing imminent threats.
[English]
Boreal caribou were listed as a threatened species under the Species at Risk Act in 2003. Caribou population trends indicate that the species is declining across Canada. In Quebec, for example, the majority of 10 populations are in decline. In 2023 the Quebec government estimated that the provincial population is fewer than 7,400 individuals, a marked decrease over the past 10 years. Two of those populations, Val d'Or and Charlevoix, are now maintained in year-round pens, with populations of nine and 39 caribou respectively.
The population in Pipmuacan declined by 24% between 2012 and 2020. Without urgent action, there is a high risk that all these populations will no longer exist in the wild and that without an adequate plan they are fated to stay in pens for the rest of their lives. That is not acceptable.
[Translation]
We've been negotiating with the Government of Quebec since 2016. We offered to share the costs of recovering and protecting caribou habitat, while advancing conservation agreements with other provinces and territories across the country.
In 2022, we thought we had a resolution: a joint letter and a clear commitment from the Government of Quebec to table a caribou recovery strategy by June 2023. That would include how we're going to protect at least 65% of the caribou habitat. Seven years after we began our deliberations and in parallel with the findings of the Commission indépendante sur les caribous forestiers et montagnards, which confirms that this species is in decline in Quebec, the provincial government must do more, as soon as possible, to protect and restore this species' habitat.
After a decision by the Governor in Council last year to favour a collaborative approach—which we have always prioritized—we awaited the Quebec government's strategy. Unfortunately, it never materialized. In response to numerous requests, my department conducted a scientific and fact-based assessment of the imminent threats to Quebec's boreal caribou ranges. This rigorous assessment is based on the best available data and information and clearly demonstrates that Quebec's boreal caribou populations are facing multiple imminent threats.
Based on this assessment, on May 10, 2024, I issued the opinion that boreal caribou face imminent threats to their recovery. Under the Species at Risk Act, I was therefore legally required to recommend to the Governor in Council an emergency order to ensure the protection of the species. On June 19, 2024, Canada announced that it was proceeding with the development of a targeted emergency order to protect the habitat of the three most endangered boreal caribou populations in Quebec.
Our government has taken a reasonable and balanced approach to this issue. This approach aims to protect the best available habitat for caribou while minimizing the socio-economic impact. Our government is not considering this emergency order lightly, just as I'm sure the decision was not taken lightly by the previous Conservative government in 2013 to implement an emergency order in the Prairies for the greater sage grouse.
Tools for caribou survival and recovery success are shared by federal, provincial and territorial governments and must include indigenous communities, municipalities, industry, unions and civil society. This cannot be successful without the province being a willing partner, as it has primary responsibility for wildlife management and many key tools.
While we have invited the Government of Quebec to participate in the consultations, the province has thus far declined to do so. What's more, it has not provided meaningful data to support the socio-economic analysis. Throughout, we have been open with the Government of Quebec to try and find a collaborative solution. Personally, I am still hopeful that we will be able to find a balanced approach, together with the Government of Quebec, which has the most flexible regulatory and legislative tool box for an approach to caribou.
On April 30, 2024, Quebec proposed a series of limited, local measures for three pilot projects, two that pertain to boreal caribou. However, the proposed measures are not clearly defined, are subject to consultations, and have no timelines for implementation. If Quebec takes sufficient measures, the implementation of the federal order may not be necessary. However, given the threat to the caribou, if the Government of Quebec does not take an adequate approach, then we have a legal and moral responsibility to intervene.
I look forward to answering your questions.
Thank you, Minister, for being here.
I'm going to ask my questions in English.
[Translation]
You can answer in French if you like.
[English]
I know this is a Quebec issue, but it's also a national issue and an international issue.
In your opening statement, you opened with our international agreements that have been signed, and the sustainable development goals are some of those agreements that we signed in 2015 with 193 different countries. Given your legal obligations under the Species at Risk Act, it wasn't your decision, was it, to propose the emergency order?
:
Thank you for the question, Mr. Longfield.
The way the Species at Risk Act works is that if the experts from Environment and Climate Change Canada come to the conclusion that a province is not doing enough work to protect the habitat of a species that is endangered. Once this determination has been made, I have a legal obligation to make a recommendation to cabinet for an emergency order. Then cabinet can decide whether or not they want to move ahead with it.
Last year, in 2023, I made a similar recommendation to cabinet, and at that time cabinet asked me if I could try to negotiate with the Government of Quebec, which we've tried to do for over a year. Unfortunately, those discussions and those negotiations were unsuccessful, which is why I had to go back to cabinet to ask again for an emergency order, which was granted this time.
It's a cabinet decision. It's not an environment minister decision. It's a cabinet decision.
:
It isn't a matter of politics, then. It's a matter of legalities, from my understanding.
You're nodding in agreement.
As we look at sustainable development goals, I believe SDG 15 is on this one—living beings on land—but sustainable development goals also include economic sustainability and environmental sustainability and social sustainability, including jobs and the support of transition, so that all of the sustainable goals line up with the three pillars of sustainability, which 193 countries have agreed to.
It seems to me that this aspect is not as much of the conversation as it potentially should be: When the countries got together at the United Nations, 193 signed on to how we as a planet are going to approach sustainability, and the caribou fall into this discussion, but so do the workers.
Could you expand on that just a bit for the committee, please?
Thank you for being here, Minister. You know, forestry is a chain: If one link in the chain gets cut, there’s a negative impact on the entire forestry industry. When I analyze the data presented to me, including the report coming from your department, I see a disproportionate impact on the forestry sector.
You must take economic conditions into account. For the last four years, the forestry sector has had to fight forest fires—which led to a considerable shortfall for people in the sector—epidemics, infestations by the spruce budworm, a profound lack of financial support from the federal government and disproportionate tariffs. You have to put it all together and, if you go ahead with the order, I guarantee you will throw Quebec’s forestry sector into complete chaos. I say that because the majority of small devitalized communities in Saguenay—Lac‑Saint‑Jean and Côte‑Nord basically live off the forest.
In the report you tabled, the order directly threatens 1,400 jobs. If we also include indirect and induced jobs, I am sincerely telling you it will be a catastrophe. I understand that you want to put pressure on Quebec. I agree with you; a way to protect the caribou must be found. However, if you go ahead, I guarantee you will throw a considerable number of communities in Saguenay—Lac‑Saint‑Jean into chaos. You will starve them out. I do not say that lightly. You will starve them out, and I am not sure you will succeed in saving the caribou.
In the forestry sector, we hear from big game biologists who do a very good job defending the caribou. However, we also have to look at the entire ecosystem. If we take forestry companies out of the forest, there will be no more forest management. Our forests will therefore be less resilient: more prone to fires and insect epidemics. Your thought process must include that as well.
I know you could say Quebec is slow to act. However, I think the best solution before us is to step back. It may also be to engage in a conversation with Quebec and different stakeholders to find a solution that will both save the caribou and, above all, save those jobs.
Since I became an MP in 2019, I’ve never seen your government do anything positive for the forest industry. If I could convey the testimony I’ve heard from all the players in the forestry sector, it would be a heartfelt plea.
What I am asking you today is to be aware of this. I fully understand your commitment, which is laudable, but I think the negative impacts are much more significant than the positive ones.
:
Mr. Guilbeault, you are legally required to act. We are also required to achieve the greenhouse gas emissions targets we set for ourselves.
And yet, I see a million inconsistencies. You shelled out $34 billion to buy a pipeline, but your most ambitious plan for the energy transition cost only $40 billion. So, on the one hand, a single oil and gas project cost $34 billion. On the other, the most ambitious project in your department’s history to fight climate change and make the energy transition cost $40 billion. That is appallingly inconsistent, but I know that you can live with it, because in politics, we sometimes have to compromise.
Today, I am asking you to compromise so that plenty of small communities in Quebec—including La Tuque, where you’re from—can keep living off the forestry sector, keep using wood to build low carbon residential units and keep replacing high carbon footprint products through the bioeconomy.
If you go forward, you threaten it all. According to the very conservative analysis you provided—which is not an insult—the impact of the order will leave 55 businesses out in the cold. Those 55 businesses are, for the most part, in small devitalized communities. I understand you are required to issue this order, but I think the government is not even close to a compromise. The best decision you could make is to wait, listen more to Quebec and try to find a compromise together.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Minister, thank you for being with us today for this important study.
This is the environment committee, so I will talk about the environment. You talked about a lot of important things during your opening remarks, such as biodiversity and climate change. I have before me a non-exhaustive list describing your government’s record on those matters.
Under the Liberal government, Canada has the worst record for reducing greenhouse gases among G7 member countries. Among all G20 members, Canada is the one that funds the oil and gas industry the most with public money. When the United Nations asked their member states to tax excessive oil and gas sector profits, lobbyists from that sector went to the finance minister’s office, and you backed down during the last budget.
We still do not have a greenhouse gas emissions cap for the oil and gas sector. The commissioner of the environment and sustainable development sounded the alarm about the fact that we cannot trust your plan to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. There are so many loopholes in it for big corporations that companies like Suncor pay a fourteenth of the carbon price than that paid by the average worker or average family.
Finally, as my colleague said, your government paid $34 billion to buy a pipeline. That pipeline was so useless, even the private sector didn’t want to take the risk of buying and expanding it.
We want to save the boreal caribou, but if we save them while the planet burns up and the forest around them burns down, what will we have accomplished?
:
We said we would do it this year. It would’ve been faster if we had been able to keep working with you. It will take a little more time, but we are the only G20 country that committed to it.
As for our plan, the Canadian Climate Institute, an independent organization, highlighted that at the rate things are going, we will achieve our interim objective by 2026. That is a first in the history of the country. The last time greenhouse gas emissions were this low in Canada, O. J. Simpson was being tried and the iPhone had been invented, but was not yet on the market. That means our emissions haven’t been this low for 25 years.
Of course, we have to work on conservation. That is why, for instance, when it comes to marine and ocean conservation, we went from 1% in 2015 to 16%. We are on track to reach 30% by 2030. When it comes to land conservation, we are at about 15%. I am the first to recognize we must do more.
:
I'll let Mr. Hermanutz or Ms. Shannon give you more details on the socio-economic aspects, but I can give you some numbers on the consultations.
Of the people who took part in the consultations, over 400 were from the forest industry and unions, some 60 were from the mining industry or were mining workers, 30 were from the tourism sector, 26 represented various municipalities, and 105 came from other sectors in the regions. In addition, 200 first nations people and 59 environmental or expert groups were consulted. In fact, we can provide you with a list of the representatives from the various municipalities, regional county municipalities, companies, associations and unions who met with us. I should add that, at the request of two indigenous communities, the consultation period was extended by one month. We held extensive consultations.
Your colleague from the Bloc Québécois told us that the solution might be to wait before tabling the order, but we've been waiting for eight years. At what point do we say to ourselves that that's not responsible, that someone at the table isn't serious? As I just said, we've been waiting eight years. You've heard several experts say that the order isn't radical, but rather a compromise. Some even think it's long overdue. It's not as if we didn't give the Quebec government a chance to sit down at the table and propose solutions. We've done so on several occasions, but it hasn't done so until now, unfortunately.
Indeed, we consider it to be a radical order and we're saying that it may not be balanced, because Mr. Branchaud, who testified before the committee on this issue in August, said that it takes 200 individuals for there to be a chance of survival, whereas you want to put in place an order for only nine individuals.
That said, I'd like to ask a question about something else: mining. An article in Le Devoir, which I have here, talks about Probe Gold's Novador project in Abitibi-Temiscamingue. To support this project, the government is reportedly prepared to exclude the area in question to allow Probe Gold to set up operations there. As reported in Le Devoir on September 13, the company acknowledges that the project will involve numerous activities in nature, including disturbing or destroying certain parts of that environment, such as diverting waterways such as rivers, or the loss of wetlands. We would add that the entire industrial complex will be located in the centre of the critical habitat of the Val-d'Or's caribou population, based on research by your department.
Yes, there will be an environmental assessment, but the fact remains that the government could authorize this project, regardless of the conclusions of that assessment, “if public interest justifies that impact”, as the article reports. It seems to me that we have a double standard when it comes to gold mines and the forestry sector. First of all, gold is not my cup of tea. We're going to allow this company to profoundly disrupt the caribou population in this region by excluding this area from the application of the order. Why?
That brings us to the end of the first hour of the meeting.
I understand you have to leave us, Minister, but the departmental representatives you brought with you can stay for another hour. They'll be joined by Marie‑Josée Couture, acting director general, Canadian Wildlife Service, and Nicholas Winfield, director general, Canadian Wildlife Service.
Ms. Couture and Mr. Winfield, please take a seat at the table. We'll continue the meeting.
Because the meeting wasn't interrupted, the next round of questions won't be six minutes per person. We'll continue with five-minute rounds and two-and-a-half-minute rounds.
We'll start with Mr. Martel.
:
Thanks very much, Mr. Chair.
Thanks to all the officials for joining us today.
I have some questions regarding our obligations, but before I get to those, I wanted to ask about the inevitability of the further decline of caribou populations if the status quo and work as usual, business as usual, are permitted to continue without any oversight, changes or innovations.
The question was posed: Is this a guarantee that populations will increase? I think we all know there are no guarantees in this type of work, but there are obligations that we must do from a legal perspective, and then there is also really good science, which we must follow in order to achieve these ambitions.
My question is, what will the status quo achieve?
I'd like to pick up on that last note. It seems as though we're taking a “hurry up and wait” approach in many ways. I understand that the minister said there was a definite need to act, but we seem to be imposing measures that are going to take decades to have any effect. We talk about road closures and we talk about reforestation; those will not happen overnight. These are remote areas. We are not planting semi-mature trees, so it will be a very long process.
The preliminary socio-economic analysis the department produced says that the incremental benefits of an order cannot be assessed due to uncertainty with respect to how an emergency order would increase the probability of recovering the species. Now, falsely said that maternal penning and wolf predation reductions don't work, and I appreciate that CWF has clarified that they do in fact work. Perhaps it is a fair criticism to say that it is not the long-term solution and that we still may need to undertake efforts like this, but the science in a peer-reviewed article by one of our previous presenters from Ecological Applications shows that the best way for an annual instantaneous rate of increase is penning and wolf reduction.
Therefore, my question to the department and to CWF is this: Why would we take an approach that we don't know is going to work but that we know, if it does work, will take a very long time, when, if we are in such an emergency decree situation, we could take action that is more immediate, that will be more effective and that will buy us time to take on these more important, longer-term solutions?
:
Thank you for the question.
In the consultations, we have discussed what could be exempted from the order. It's not what will be exempted, but simply an approach for how to tackle the balance between biodiversity or conservation gains and economic losses.
There is a difference in the scale of landscape-level change between forestry operations and mining. Both need to be managed effectively to protect caribou, but one of the differences relates to the physical footprint and the size of the impact. In the context of forestry, it tends to have a larger footprint on forests than mining, and therefore on caribou habitat, but in both cases, they need to be managed sustainably.
Your point is taken. Thank you.
My colleague can answer on the socio-economic aspect.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Thank you to the witnesses for being here.
I just want to say, Mr. Winfield, that I appreciate that you ended the last question by saying that the boreal caribou have no chance if an emergency order is not put in place. We may question what the probability of success is of this program, but we know they will not be here. They'll be extirpated if we do not do something.
As you know, from 2002, this species has been on the species at risk list. There's so much work that's been done over the years, and as several witnesses have said, these animals are the most studied of any in Canada. We know a lot about them.
There seems to be this tension attached to short-term profitability and job retention. Of course, jobs are very important. In fact, our government has created more jobs than any other government, but it's the role of government to look at the longer term and not just at short-term profit. I'm wondering if you could put this in context in terms of these jobs in the forestry sector.
When we have a in place and we know that there has to be a transition and the health of these forests is so linked to the health of the caribou, are these jobs going to be there longer than another two or three years, say, if the caribou are extinct and these circumstances of climate change, forest fires and all these other things continue to grow? Are we looking at just a short-term solution as opposed to a long-term solution when we simply focus on saving the jobs and the types of jobs that are there today, rather than looking at long-term employment for these communities that are so important?
:
Mr. Chair, ladies and gentlemen, members of the committee, thank you for the opportunity to share my thoughts on boreal caribou.
I am a forest engineer, retired from the Quebec Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry, where I worked for 30 years. I still remain active, notably working on management issues in the boreal forest.
Over the past 15 to 20 years, I have witnessed the debates concerning the fate of the boreal caribou. Throughout this period, I've always felt that the vast majority of stakeholders were keen to strike a balance, and that no one wanted to see a catastrophe for forest communities. In my opinion, this is a valuable asset to cultivate. This quest for balance certainly involves optimizing protection efforts. The borders of the areas to be protected have been redrawn a thousand times. Measures with the least impact on the industry have often been examined.
However, if we are to find a consensual solution, we also need to look at the other end of the spectrum. The current business model and its value chain must also be part of the equation. These are not immutable and must evolve. Defending the status quo at all costs is not a position conducive to compromise, especially since an evolution of the business model could make room for caribou while offering interesting economic prospects. We owe it to ourselves to explore this path.
Several players in the forestry world are talking about the need for a just transition. I agree, but I would add that a concrete and rigorous discussion on the subject is undeniably part of a consensus-building process. What we need to do now is to move beyond general ideas and start drawing up a just transition plan. In my opinion, such a plan should have three components.
First, short-term mitigation measures must be put in place to offset immediate impacts. Several options are possible. One example is the possibility of revising plant supply structures. This has already been done in the past. In addition, silvicultural programs requiring the workforce usually involved in harvesting are conceivable. In addition, other regional worksites could provide employment for certain categories of workers; I'm thinking of wind farms, among others.
The second and most important aspect concerns the industrial transition itself. The sawmilling industry is already in a process of consolidation. In this context, there will be winners with more profitable mills, but there will also be losers with villages that will see their mills close. This is when we need to consider the development of new niches based on a value-added approach, or on the exploitation of wood that is currently available but underutilized by the industry. There are significant quantities of wood to be valorized. Wood chemistry could offer interesting options.
Finally, the third component consists of making adjustments to ensure a predictable supply for the next industrial generation. A number of problems currently compromise the expected wood supply, even disregarding caribou. The debate surrounding the order should lead to the creation of a working group to prepare a transition plan. To be successful, this group should call on independent experts and ensure transparency in its approach. It will also need financial support from both levels of government. It won't be an easy task, and the results are uncertain, but I refuse to believe that they will be zero. If not, what's the other option?
It takes a touch of naiveté to think that the caribou controversy will slowly die out as the last individuals are put into enclosures. If a credible plan to protect the caribou is not put in place soon, the conflict will persist and eventually become more radical. One consequence of this will be to put off investors. Yet they are essential players in the modernization of a timber industry that we hope will be robust and sustainable for the benefit of forest communities. Let's take advantage of the fact that everyone wants this future for the communities, and include all the ingredients in the discussion. That way, we'll be able to find a solution that truly brings people together.
I think my main message is to say that there are options, and this may be the only way forward we have.
:
Good evening. My name is Joseph‑Pierre Dufour.
After 40 years of development, our current structure, which utilizes renewable forest resources, now uses 100% of the material. Although we are dependent on a single resource, its value is applied in a variety of economic sectors.
If you're already familiar with the Sacré‑Coeur complex, you'll know that in addition to the Boisaco plant, which produces lumber, it also includes the Sacopan plant, which uses the shavings to produce door panels, Granulco, which uses them to design pellets, and Ripco, which transforms wood shavings into equestrian bedding. To ensure that nothing goes to waste, our thermal power plants and boiler rooms burn the bark for our heat-intensive processes and, finally, send the ash to local farmers. I believe our complex is an exemplary model, supported by the local community and based on a vision of sustainable development.
The proposed emergency order jeopardizes over 600 direct jobs, hundreds of indirect jobs, contractors and businesses. Many families would be affected by the disappearance of the region's only economic engine. With a population of 5,000 spread over four municipalities, it's obvious that this would be catastrophic for the Haute‑Côte‑Nord and would also have negative repercussions for the Saguenay and Charlevoix regions.
Let's face it, we're not going to reinvent the Haute‑Côte‑Nord economy overnight. We're not in a major centre, but in a relatively isolated and remote region, where interesting jobs in our respective trades are hundreds of kilometres away. What's most likely to happen if worse comes to worst is that many families will leave for other regions, because here, there won't really be any jobs left to support them.
Thank you.
My name is Valérie Dufour and I have the privilege of working for Boisaco Inc. I'm also a municipal councillor for Sacré‑Coeur. My spouse and I both work thanks to the Boisaco group's forestry operations.
I am appearing before you today so that you know that, since the announcement of the possible adoption of the order, our lives have literally been on pause. For example, when my children asked me this year what we were going to do over the summer vacation, I had to tell them that there would be no vacation this summer. I told them that if the order goes through as is, mom and dad will lose their jobs and have to move out of Sacré‑Coeur. I promised them that I would do everything in my power to try to stay at home in Sacré‑Coeur.
My family isn't the only one going through such times of uncertainty and anguish. The closure of Boisaco's plants would be catastrophic for Sacré‑Coeur and its citizens. On behalf of myself, my spouse, my children, my family, my friends, my colleagues and the citizens of my village, I ask you to review the order and find plausible solutions. I remain hopeful that, together, we can find solutions that will enable us to keep our jobs and continue to earn a decent living. This is a huge cry from the heart to you this evening on behalf of all the dads and moms who, like me, have promised their children that they could continue to work and stay at home in Sacré‑Coeur.
Thank you very much.
:
Good evening, everyone.
My name is Joyce Dionne and I'm a wood harvesting specialist at Boisaco. The Dionne family has been harvesting wood for over 50 years. Even the children have the same passion as we do. I lead a team of 15 men, all as proud as I am of their forestry profession. The announcement of the order is a catastrophe for us. It jeopardizes the families of forestry workers.
The work of harvesting and management creates a renewable forest, which we all take care of by respecting biodiversity and environmental standards. What's more, forest management greatly reduces the risk of fire and allows the public to enjoy the area for leisure activities.
There's a way for everyone to benefit without the loss of thousands of direct and indirect jobs. I sincerely believe that with Boisaco's knowledge of the territory and the government's requirements, we can find solutions together to abolish this decree. To better understand the sector in question, I would like the members of your committee to visit our territory. They'll then have a better idea of the situation and be able to make a more informed decision.
Twenty-five years ago, when I started in forestry in this same area, there were 40 harvesters and three sawmills. Today, we have fewer than 10 harvesters and only one sawmill in the territory, and we're not in a position to operate it. Where will it all end? Because of the order, I'm feeling stress, anxiety and discouragement, which is upsetting everyone around me. I'd like you to think about the future of our young people in forestry, which would also be compromised by this order. Don't forget that we all depend on the forest.
Thank you for listening.
I'd like to thank all the witnesses who are participating in this evening's meeting.
First of all, I would like to express my gratitude to all the workers in the forestry sector. Wood, and pulp and paper are sustainable products compared to other products, such as plastics. Thank you very much for your conscientious work, for your efforts in tree planting and reforestation, and for your contribution to the Canadian economy.
[English]
For what it's worth, you seem stressed, and I just want to express my sympathy with you, because this seems like a very emotional and stressful time for your families. You're working hard to provide for your families and contribute to the Canadian economy, and I want to acknowledge that.
My question is for Monsieur Jetté. It's about the future of forestry in Canada and about our ability and, frankly, obligation to ensure that there is one. We have to ensure that there is a future economy of forestry in Canada because we rely on it. We rely on the products, and we rely on the contributions to the economy. Workers rely on the money they make to provide for their families.
From my perspective.... We built a deck this summer out of wood. That wood was harvested in Canada. We need to ensure that we have a sustainable lumber and pulp and paper economy in Canada. That includes making sure that our commitments for biodiversity are also respected.
The term “balance” has come up a few times in this committee. We've had workers, industry representatives and scientists come and express varying degrees of urgency with respect to the population of caribou and also for the industry itself.
From your position, Monsieur Jetté, where do we find a balance for Canadian workers, for the Canadian economy and for the future of the forestry industry, which needs to protect the whole forest and not just the woods?
Thank you for being here, Mr. Jetté.
I'd also like to thank Ms. Dufour, Mr. Dufour and Mr. Dionne.
You know that I understand all of you. I'm a girl from the Côte-Nord.
I'd like to start with a personal comment. Ms. Dufour really touched me when she spoke of leaving her home and region. What she's going through now, I experienced it at another time and in a slightly different way. The father of my two oldest children worked at Sacopan. Then he worked for Kruger in Longue-Rive, on the Haute‑Côte‑Nord. When the sawmill closed, we moved to Baie-Comeau, with all the repercussions that implies for our lives, our families, and even the community.
Yes, I'm talking about myself, because I've experienced it to my core, but I'm also talking about the communities. We can't say that the municipality of Longue-Rive is back to what it was in the past. Many of our communities are single-industry towns, and I'm hearing some naive solutions here, which I don't like. You can't go 400 kilometres from home to work on wind turbines when you've always lived in a forestry community on the banks of the Saguenay. Port‑Cartier is not Sacré‑Coeur.
I must tell you that, on a number of occasions, I have asked to go and visit that community. That was long before Ms. Boulianne became mayor. Obviously, for me, a number of things are at stake, as I'm sure they are for you, the entire Boisaco team.
First, there is the issue of social peace, in addition to all the talk about our families. There is a lot of talk about first nations, but at the same time, I wonder if we're talking to all first nations. How often do we talk about their knowledge? I've been out in the field and spoken with their members. According to them, the caribou is moving east. We also have to look at the reality of first nations. The caribou aren't necessarily in the Pipmuacan reservoir area. They won't stay there either. Anthropogenic activity isn't limited to the forest industry; it includes recreation. In short, there are all kinds.
I, too, was at a loss yesterday when I read an article that said that, as far as Ontario is concerned, the federal government had an agreement with the Ford government for the industry. Funny, it sounds like a double standard. The federal government doesn't make any effort, unlike the Government of Quebec. You saw Blanchette Vézina, Champagne Jourdain, Ms. Laforest and Mr. Montigny. They went to see you, as did my team, to say that Quebec is there and that Quebec will help you. In fact, what the federal government is doing with Ontario is that it isn't asking for the same thing. That amazes me. I think the government needs to take that into account.
What also concerns me—and I'd like to hear your comments on this—is the extent to which Sacré‑Coeur is a model. We're told that all trees, all species, all parts of the tree must be used, but Boisaco is already doing it, as Mr. Dufour said at the beginning of the meeting. Companies like Sacopan, Ripco and Granulco already use all the wood. There's nothing left that's not being used. What's more, it's one of Boisaco's wishes—I think it was Mr. Dionne who mentioned it—to respect the environment and be a sustainable business.
I've been hearing prejudices here for a while. I'm hearing that your business isn't sustainable. I'm hearing that more needs to be done. However, you're already doing more than most businesses. What the government is going to do with this order is to say that there is a great model of sustainability for all businesses in Quebec, and even in Canada, but that it is still going to shut down the village. This is unacceptable. Thank you for being here to challenge this order. We want quick solutions. There's a lot of talk about caribou and quick fixes. I'd like to hear your comments on this too.
Ms. Dufour, you talked about anxiety. We're wondering what this order will do, but it's already having an impact. It's already destroying the industry back home and destroying villages. We'll certainly be with you. Sacré‑Coeur won't be closing, but I would like to hear your comments on everything I've said, and I'd like you to round out my remarks. People need to hear realities other than just some of the prejudices and stereotypes we hear here in committee.
Ms. Dufour, Mr. Dufour and Mr. Dionne, take the rest of the time.
I'd like to thank all the witnesses for being here with us, even if it is virtually, for this study, which is important to many people.
Ladies and gentlemen, I'm also very touched to hear you talk about your stories and realities, which I know little about, unlike others, but about which I've been learning a lot over the past several weeks. These are extremely sensitive issues, and I fully understand that they're causing a great deal of concern and anxiety. We're going to try to find the right way to do what we need to do collectively, both for the protection of the environment and biodiversity, and for regional development and job retention.
Mr. Jetté, you said two important words: “fair transition”. Everyone is including a bit of what they want in that notion. I'm very proud of the work we've done, particularly with , on a sustainable jobs bill, so that workers and unions have a place at the table.
You started talking about what the beginning of a fair transition and change in the industry might look like, in three points. The first thing you talked about was mitigation. I'd like to understand a little more about what you're talking about. Then I'll ask you some other questions.
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The industrial transition is under way, but we're not sure it's going to be fair. It's therefore important to consider the fate of the categories of workers who may be affected by changes. For a certain category of workers—and I'm thinking of forestry workers in particular—there is a package of options enabling them to continue working in their field. I was talking about silvicultural programs, for example, where these people could be used. When I gave the example of wind power, I was thinking of the megapark project in both regions, where there will be road construction to be done. It's things like that.
It should be noted that the other transition we seem to be witnessing, in other words, the consolidation of sawmills, will make volumes available. This is where the decision—to return to the word “fair”—becomes not just a business issue but a social one, too. With regard to the changes we're seeing, how can we help Sacré‑Coeur? How can we help Saint-Ludger-de-Milot, a village in Lac-Saint-Jean where a plant has announced its closure?
It's not a matter of drawing up a transition plan and saying that we're going to focus on bioproducts in Canada. No. You have to know what's being done in Saint-Ludger-de-Milot, based on the wood you can find, which isn't necessarily fir or spruce, which is used to make two-by-fours. We have to find something else. We have money, technology and expertise. We have chemists who know these things. Can we put all that together and do everything we can to help villages like Saint-Ludger-de-Milot when we see that there's a social problem? That's a fair transition plan. It's a reasoned transition based on the interests of the communities, the workers.
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Right now, I see four sources. I gave you the example of hardwood that, for all kinds of reasons, don't have the quality of wood required to meet the current structure. However, that doesn't mean that, with biochemistry, applications couldn't be found for them in bioproducts. I'm not an expert in this area, but I know there are cases where this is starting to happen. You have to do it by all means.
The second source is burnt wood; about 920,000 hectares of forest have been burnt. For the lumber industry, the ability to get that wood is very low, and after a year, the wood is no longer good. As a result, there are about 900,000 hectares of wood left. What can be done with it? With climate change, there will be more burnt wood. Wouldn't that be something to tap into?
Then, on the Côte‑Nord, the industry is less interested in fir, which is dismissed because it doesn't meet the sawmill's needs. So what other needs can it meet?
The final source is construction waste, which currently ends up in landfills. Because it's made of wood, it emits methane, which is the worst way to produce greenhouse gases. In that case, can we think about creating a circular economy by recovering this material for other things, such as bioproducts and energy?
I'll leave it to the experts to decide, but, as you can see, there are possible solutions. We have to roll up our sleeves and help each other. We need to support the message we're hearing and, in my opinion, we have to give a message of hope. We have the technology to make that transition.
Thank you to the witnesses. I apologize for the interruption to our meeting.
I'm very interested in the sustainability of the lumber and forestry industry. I've worked in that industry myself out of Winnipeg, but also out of various plants in Ontario and up in Saguenay. I saw what happened to the paper industry when newspapers stopped being read. China took on cheap paper. The paper industry went to a better grade of paper to try to keep value in Canada. We definitely need to keep a healthy forestry industry in Canada.
Mr. Dionne, you mentioned the sustainability efforts. Since the 1970s, it's a different industry. The sustainability of the forestry industry is an example for all industries. You mentioned the commitment there. I'm not trying to trap you into a commitment, but I think it's important to set that baseline that we need to work together for a sustainable industry. You mentioned that animals and caribou come into this.
Could you maybe put some context to sustainability for us, as a committee, as we discuss this, Mr. Dionne?
Thank you, Mr. Chair.
To the witnesses, I am obviously not from Quebec, but when I ran for politics last year, the main thing I ran on was protecting our rural way of life. I feel an incredible kinship with our witnesses today, as they are defending their own way of life, it seems to me, while having an “Ottawa knows best” government running roughshod not only over their livelihoods, but over their entire community. I appreciate your very passionate and personal testimony today.
During the conversation with a couple of hours ago, I noticed that in response to MP Chatel, he said that when workers come here to committee, the Conservatives ignore what they say. We are not ignoring you. We hear you.
My colleague Mr. Martel has been doing a fantastic job of defending not only the rights of his riding but also the important work the forestry sector and forestry workers do across Quebec and, in turn, across all of Canada. During his conversation with the mayor of Sacré-Coeur, he asked her what would happen if this order were enacted, and she suggested the region would “become a ghost town.” replied today during our conversation that it was curious, because it was not the message the workers gave him when he met with them.
To close out this meeting, I would like to have Mr. Dufour, Ms. Dufour and Mr. Dionne each give their assessment of the workers' view. Are they terrified that their livelihoods and communities are about to be ruined, or are they in fact okay with this Ottawa imposition and the impact it's going to have on their livelihoods?
I'll start with Mr. Dionne.
I want to thank the witnesses.
Your comments today are echoed in my own backyard. There are rural communities in my constituency. In the northern Outaouais region, you may be familiar with the Gatineau Valley and Maniwaki. We have Louisiana‑Pacific Canada Ltd. and Resolute Forest Products.
A number of families, like you, have been affected by this fear. Access to fibre is a major issue in forestry. Workers and forestry companies have been making heartfelt pleas at committee meetings for us to work together.
Ms. Dufour, I see you. Your heartfelt plea is for all levels of government, industries and workers to join forces, because solutions exist.
I've seen in committee how the Conservatives aren't listening to workers and their heartfelt pleas. They don't want to work together. They want to create division among us. You and our constituents are saying that we need to sit down together and find solutions.
All the witnesses told us something that we confirmed with the minister earlier. We're missing a key player in the effort to save both the economy and the ecology, which we can do. When we work together, we can innovate and find solutions. We're missing Quebec, which isn't at the table to help find solutions. This is my heartfelt plea. We must ask Quebec to join the effort, to sit down with the federal government and to find solutions for Sacré‑Coeur, for Boisaco and for the future. You have three children and I know many families. We also want jobs for our children. We don't want them to leave our regions. We want them to have the opportunity to work in forestry too.
Ms. Dufour, can you tell us about your hope that governments and political parties will work together to find a solution for you?