:
I'm calling the meeting to order.
Good afternoon, everybody. Welcome to meeting number 20 of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Government Operations and Estimates. Today the committee will be hearing from the Parliamentary Budget Officer about the main estimates for 2022-23. It will then continue its study on the air defence procurement projects.
Today's meeting is taking place in a hybrid format, pursuant to the House order of November 25, 2021. Members are attending in person in the room and remotely by using the Zoom application. Regarding the speaking list, the committee clerk and I will do the best we can to maintain a consolidated order of speaking for all members, whether they are participating virtually or in person.
I'd like to take this opportunity to remind all participants in this meeting that screenshots or taking photos of your screen is not permitted.
Given the ongoing pandemic situation and in light of the recommendations from public health authorities, as well as the directive of the Board of Internal Economy on October 19, 2021, to remain healthy and safe, the following points are recommended for those who are attending the meeting in person.
Anyone with symptoms should participate by Zoom and not attend the meeting in person. Everyone must maintain two-metre physical distancing, whether seated or standing. Everyone must wear a non-medical mask when circulating in the room. It is recommended in the strongest possible terms that members wear their masks at all times, including when seated. Non-medical masks, which provide better clarity over cloth masks, are available in the room.
Everyone present must maintain proper hand hygiene by using the hand sanitizer at the room entrance. Committee rooms are cleaned before and after each meeting. To maintain this, everyone is encouraged to clean surfaces such as the desk, chair and microphone with the provided disinfectant wipes when vacating or taking a seat.
As the chair, I will be enforcing these measures for the duration of the meeting. I thank members in advance for their co-operation.
My apologies. We're having a little computer glitch, so we're just going to suspend briefly.
Good afternoon, Mr. Chair and members of the committee.
Thank you for the invitation to appear before the committee today.
We are pleased to be here today to discuss our analysis of the Government’s Expenditure Plan and Main Estimates for 2022-23 fiscal year, which was published on March 1, 2022 x.
With me today I have Kaitlyn Vanderwees, our lead analyst on the Estimates, and Christopher Penney, our lead analyst on defense issues.
The Main Estimates for 2022-23 fiscal year outlines $397.6 billion in budgetary authorities, $190.3 billion of which requires approval by Parliament. The first part of this money, about $75 billion, was approved through at the end of March.
Of note, proposed spending for the Indigenous portfolio will total $45.4 billion in these main estimates, which represents a 214 per cent increase over Indigenous-related budgetary expenditures in 2017-18. This significant increase is primarily related to the roughly $20 billion in compensation for First Nations children and their families.
Additionally, Federal spending on Elderly Benefits is set to increase by $6.7 billion, or approximately 10.9 per cent, to a total of $68.3 billion in 2022-23, and the Canada Health Transfer will grow by $2.1 billion, or 4.8 per cent, to $45.2 billion in 2022-23.
[English]
A concern that I would like to point out is that while the government refers to the main estimates as the government's expenditure plan, they generally do not include any measures in the corresponding budget, nor do the departmental plans, and therefore they present an incomplete picture of government spending.
As such, it hinders your ability to understand and scrutinize the government's funding requests, track new policy measures announced in the budget or identify the expected results of new budget measures. This committee has released recommendations in both 2012 and 2019 to remedy these shortcomings, notably to table the budget and main estimates concurrently with consistent information and present details of new spending presented in main and supplementary estimates in departmental plans as soon as possible.
I see no reason that they cannot be implemented. These changes would create a cohesive, intuitive and, critically, transparent financial decision-making process for legislators.
We'd be pleased to respond to any questions you may have regarding our analysis of the expenditure plan and main estimates for 2022-23 or other PBO work.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Good afternoon, Mr. Giroux.
Thank you for being with us, and thanks to your colleagues as well. It's always a pleasure to see you.
Near the end of your statement, you mentioned a major problem, which the committee noted in 2012 and 2019, and that's the fact that government spending and the budget don't match up.
Does that explain the other problem that recently arose, which you reported and which is the reason you're here today?
I'm talking about the $15 billion discrepancy in the National Defence budget that the President of the Treasury Board couldn't explain. Even the explanation given by the deputy minister, who was accompanying her, wasn't clear. That's why we asked you to appear today to explain the $15 billion amount, which doesn't appear in the documents initially presented to parliamentarians.
We're being asked to approve spending that doesn't match up. Does what you said today explain this $15 billion discrepancy in the budget?
I'll move on to another subject.
This week, we welcomed Kevin Mooney, the president of Irving Shipbuilding Inc., to the committee and discussed the contract for the surface combatant ships, the 15 future frigates.
The committee has a lot of data for our study on naval operations, but we're having trouble understanding it.
On Tuesday, Mr. Mooney said that, based on the data presented, the estimated cost to build the 15 frigates was currently less than $60 billion. He also told us that our government had estimated the cost of the project at about $60 billion. However, the estimate cited in the report you published last year, or two years ago, was $77 billion.
Mr. Mooney also told the committee he was issuing quarterly updates. However, you often tell us you find it hard to get the information you and your team need to do your work.
Have you received a more accurate update on the frigates?
We hear various numbers: less than $60 billion, approximately $60 billion and $77 billion. Which is the right amount?
Can you answer that question?
Perhaps your colleague who handles defence issues can.
:
The challenge it has represented for the office, and still continues to represent, is that the workload has increased because of government expenditures.
At the early outset of the pandemic, there was not a lot of information being made available to Canadians on the budgetary situation, so we had to step up and provide that information. It also meant a lot of work for the employees, the staff in the office, to try to independently estimate the cost of the multiple measures that were put in place. That was one impact.
As with millions of Canadians, our employees have had to work from home for a significant period over the last two years. Some continue to work from home, at least part time. It has presented challenges, but in that sense we're no different from others.
What it meant for the fiscal situation, as we have seen, is a dramatic increase in government expenditures and the deficit, which the government is still recovering from by lowering the extraordinary expenditures under COVID and returning to a more normal level of deficit that is closer to what we saw before the pandemic.
:
Certainly. It's always a pleasure to explain these fiscal and budgetary issues.
The main estimates and the supplementary estimates are the way by which the government finances its operations. Because the government cannot spend money that has not been approved by Parliament, it has to seek approval, either through stand-alone legislation—such as, for example, through the Old Age Security Act to spend in an ongoing manner for old age security, as one example—or it can seek approval for an annual spending authority, such as for the functioning of Parliament, of government operations and departments, and so on. There needs to be legislation to allow the government to spend. That is done, usually, through the main estimates or the supplementary estimates.
The budget, on the other hand, is a document that lays out policy priorities and the way the government will be exercising that authority and implementing those priorities, and that includes changes to tax policy and changes to policy that may not have any expenditure implications. Those exercises are not identical, but they are broadly similar.
It's not a very good explanation, I know, in a short period of time.
With that, we've come to the end of our questions. I would like to thank Mr. Giroux, Mr. Penney and Ms. Vanderwees for coming today and bearing with us at the beginning. Thank you for your answers. We look forward to having you back at a future time.
With that said, so that the committee is aware, the order of reference for the committee study of the main estimates expires on Tuesday, May 31, 2022. If the committee feels that it has completed its considerations of the main estimates, we can proceed to take a decision on the votes that were referred to the committee.
In all, 21 votes in the main estimates 2022-23 were referred to the committee. Unless anyone objects, I will seek the unanimous consent of the committee to group the votes together for a decision.
Is there unanimous consent to proceed in this way?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
The Chair: Thank you very much.
Shall all votes referred to the committee in the main estimates 2022-23, less the amounts voted in interim supply, carry?
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Vote 1—Payments to the Corporation for special purposes..........$22,210,000
(Vote 1 agreed to on division)
CANADA SCHOOL OF PUBLIC SERVICE
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Vote 1—Program expenditures..........$62,991,464
(Vote 1 agreed to on division)
CANADIAN INTERGOVERNMENTAL CONFERENCE SECRETARIAT
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Vote 1—Program expenditures..........$5,613,899
(Vote 1 agreed to on division)
CANADIAN TRANSPORTATION ACCIDENT INVESTIGATION AND SAFETY BOARD
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Vote 1—Program expenditures..........$31,924,200
(Vote 1 agreed to on division)
NATIONAL CAPITAL COMMISSION
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Vote 1—Payments to the Commission for operating expenditures..........$75,875,420
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Vote 5—Payments to the Commission for capital expenditures..........$78,341,049
(Votes 1 and 5 agreed to on division)
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR GENERAL'S SECRETARY
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Vote 1—Program expenditures..........$20,510,231
(Vote 1 agreed to on division)
OFFICE OF THE PARLIAMENTARY BUDGET OFFICER
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Vote 1—Program expenditures..........$6,650,891
(Vote 1 agreed to on division)
OFFICE OF THE PUBLIC SECTOR INTEGRITY COMMISSIONER
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Vote 1—Program expenditures..........$5,121,624
(Vote 1 agreed to on division)
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Vote 1—Program expenditures..........$171,938,081
(Vote 1 agreed to on division)
PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION
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Vote 1—Program expenditures..........$80,875,554
(Vote 1 agreed to on division)
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Vote 1—Program expenditures..........$84,536,860
(Vote 1 agreed to on division)
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Vote 1—Operating expenditures..........$2,161,889,344
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Vote 5—Capital expenditures..........$339,296,808
(Votes 1 and 5 agreed to on division)
TREASURY BOARD SECRETARIAT
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Vote 1—Program expenditures..........$320,060,709
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Vote 5—Government Contingencies..........$750,000,000
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Vote 10—Government-wide Initiatives..........$152,305,896
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Vote 20—Public Service Insurance..........$3,195,856,257
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Vote 25—Operating Budget Carry Forward..........$2,100,000,000
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Vote 30—Paylist Requirements..........$600,000,000
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Vote 35—Capital Budget Carry Forward..........$700,000,000
(Votes 1, 5, 10, 20, 25, 30 and 35 agreed to on division)
The Chair: Thank you.
Shall I report the votes back to the house?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
The Chair: Thank you.
With that, we will suspend briefly to set up the next panel of witnesses and then continue with our study.
:
Mr. Chair, thank you. Committee members, thanks for this opportunity to testify. I'll introduce myself and my reasons for being here today.
I am a naval architect who emigrated to Canada in 1981. Since then, I have worked on every major Canadian government marine project, and on many other government and commercial shipbuilding projects worldwide. I retired from full-time employment at the end of 2020. I should emphasize that I am testifying today as an individual concerned Canadian citizen and not as a representative of any group or past employer.
You have already heard much testimony in this committee that the NSS has challenges and has had setbacks. My much blunter message is that NSS has failed and that it needs to be fixed or scrapped.
It's not delivering the ships the Canadian navy and Coast Guard need, and the few ships it has delivered have cost an indecent amount of money. We've become an international laughingstock. Broadly speaking, Canada is paying between three and five times the world price for ships and taking two to four times longer to get them.
We can't wait indefinitely for our new ships. Our navy and Coast Guard are rusting out. In the last few years, Canada has had to acquire more interim ships than new ones in order to fill gaps.
Let me review some comparative international projects.
I'll start with JSS. I was involved with JSS from 1998 until my retirement. In 2011, the project was awarded to Seaspan under NSS. In 2013, the decision was made to select the German Berlin class as the basis. Design work started in 2014 and construction in 2018. As of May 2022, assembly of the basic construction blocks is still not complete. My estimate is that the first ship may be completed by late 2025, perhaps 2026, with acceptance by the navy later. The project cost is currently estimated at about $4.1 billion for two ships and is likely to escalate further. The first ship will cost at least $2.5 billion.
The New Zealand maritime support ship Aotearoa is a brand new design, with a polar ice class that allows for Antarctic operations. She is technologically well in advance of JSS and roughly the same size and speed. Her design and build took almost exactly four years. The shipyard contract was $500 million Canadian. The Canadian project is roughly five times more expensive and is taking well over three times longer.
The Italian navy's new Vulcano was mentioned by a previous witness. She was awarded as a design contract in 2015 and commissioned in 2021, despite a major fire during construction. She also cost roughly $500 million Canadian.
Most of the ships under NSS are highly specialized vessels, so it is often difficult to find projects that look directly comparable. The Canadian offshore oceanographic science vessel and the South African navy equivalent are both designs by my ex-employer, with the much smaller Canadian ship being currently quoted at five times the cost of the South African vessel.
Another interesting recent project was the development of a large offshore patrol vessel for the Taiwan Coast Guard, a 5,000-tonne vessel with a 24-knot speed. Concept design to delivery took less than four years, and the cost of that four-ship program was slightly below $500 million Canadian. This Taiwanese vessel is different in concept from the Arctic and offshore patrol ship, but comparable in terms of complexity.
I was the program manager for AOPS from 2007 to 2010. AOPS is a cousin of the Norwegian Coast Guard's Svalbard, and my team had full access to costing for the Svalbard in order to support our own estimates, particularly for shipyard labour. We generally assumed that three times the European labour content would be needed. Based on the actual cost of AOPS, it seems that the true numbers are catastrophically worse. Given that the costs of the seventh and eighth ships are expected to be in excess of $1.5 billion, it seems that the situation is getting worse, not better. The Norwegian Coast Guard is now building three new ships that are bigger and more powerful for around $700 million in total.
Please note that these latest AOPS are not wanted or needed by either the navy or the Coast Guard. They are only being built to keep the shipyard busy until the surface combatant project is ready to move forward.
Fix NSS or scrap it. Frankly, I don't think it's fixable. There are fundamental flaws baked into its design. Much of the government's decision-making has been contracted out to what I'll describe as rent-seeking oligarchs whose interests don't appear to be aligned with those of the navy, the Coast Guard or the country.
Canada squandered billions of dollars on NSS and is at risk of wasting tens of billions more in the coming decades. We will not be giving the navy, the Coast Guard or Canada itself the ships they'll need.
This shouldn't be a partisan issue. Successive Conservative and Liberal governments share responsibility for the situation we find ourselves in. I implore this committee to look at the hard decisions that need to be taken to preserve our maritime safety and security capabilities.
Thank you.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman and members of the committee.
I represent Unifor Marine Workers Federation Local 1. We appreciate the opportunity to speak with you today to highlight the importance of the shipbuilding contract for our members.
My name is Shannon Sampson. I'm the president of Local 1. With me today is our business agent, Adam Slaunwhite.
I understand that Kevin Mooney and Kevin Young have invited you to come to visit the Halifax shipyard. We would be honoured to have the opportunity to introduce you to your proud shipbuilders.
The three main topics I would like to discuss are as follows: number one, our members and the national shipbuilding strategy; number two, the challenges of COVID-19; number three, the transition from AOPS to the Canadian surface combatant project.
Marine Workers Local 1 was established in 1937. We have had up to three generations of shipbuilders working together at one time. Our members have weathered the boom and bust of national shipbuilding, and we still stand. We know what it means to see our members lose their livelihoods. The period of bust before that big announcement in October 2011 saw the largest shipyard in the country close. Saint John Shipbuilding was once home to over 3,200 skilled trades building the frigates. That is something we would never want our members to face.
Today we are building ships to sustain future generations. Canada has made this possible, and we do not take this for granted. The national shipbuilding strategy is growing a whole new generation of shipbuilders, and we are committed to delivering the best ships to the Royal Canadian Navy and the Canadian Coast Guard.
My generation is committed to the national shipbuilding strategy. We're keeping trades home, and we're bringing them home. Our local has over 229 apprentices, which is the largest number in a single employer in Atlantic Canada. Local 1 is committed to supporting our apprentices throughout their journey to achieve their Red Seal certification. We had a record-breaking number in 2021 and we're on track to breaking the record again in 2022.
The NSS has added over 700 skilled shipbuilders to our local. These shipbuilding opportunities are life-changing for our members. Our workforce is growing and diversifying, and we believe that skilled trades must include the under-represented. I am the first female president of Local 1, and I am proud of the number of women in trades at our shipyard. It exceeds both the provincial and the national average.
The Halifax shipyard and our members felt the impact of COVID-19, being an essential workforce. Nova Scotia Health Authority regulations closed schools and day cares for months on end, which reduced our workforce because of the need to care for young children. Irving Shipbuilding worked closely with the Health Authority to create site-specific distancing and safety protocols that protected all of our members. Maintaining these protocols affected production efficiencies, but we still persevered to deliver two Arctic offshore and patrol ships and are pulling together to deliver ship number three this fall.
Our members in ship repair, which is the mainstay of hundreds of jobs, have also delivered HMCS Charlottetown back to service and have welcomed HMCS Ville de Québec to the dry dock.
We're working hard to maintain the vote of confidence we rightly earned from Canada in 2011. As a team, Local 1 firmly believes that the protection of Canada against threats to our sovereignty and security begins at home and should be built at home. The NSS is all about Canadians working to keep Canadians safe.
AOPS has given us the opportunity to grow our team and expand our skills as we get ready for CSC. In order to sustain our workforce, we need to ensure there is no gap between completing AOPS and starting CSC. Our skilled members at Irving Shipbuilding earned the contract to build these combatant ships, and we are committed to building them all. This is a generational opportunity, and we are 100% focused on seeing this generation and the next employed on this historic journey for the navy.
Thank you.
:
Mr. Chair and honourable members, thank you for the invitation to speak to you today on the national shipbuilding strategy.
I am here as chairman of the Canadian Marine Industries and Shipbuilding Association, or CMISA. CMISA's purpose is to represent and champion the advancement of the marine and shipbuilding industry across Canada. We represent 80% of Canadian shipbuilding production capacity. Our membership reflects a diverse group of successful businesses of all sizes in a range of marine industry sectors all across Canada. Our board therefore comprises directors from all major sectors across Canada, including partners in our NSS.
In the spirit of full disclosure, all our directors have day jobs in the industry. In my day job I am senior vice-president for commercial and government programs at Davie shipbuilding.
Personally, I have more than 45 years of experience in Canadian shipbuilding. Serving in executive positions in the private and government sectors, I worked on many contracts for the government and later for the shipbuilders. I was deeply involved in the original NSPS, the national shipbuilding procurement strategy, having been part of the successful Irving proposal. I hope I can offer unique insights on behalf of our CMISA members.
Let me start by commending Canada for its foresight and political will in creating our national shipbuilding strategy. The key to any successful strategy is to plan, execute, monitor and adjust. I emphasize “adjust”. This current review should be applauded for seeking to improve our NSS.
NSS projects either completed or under way, supported by many CMISA members, will benefit Canadians for decades to come. However, our NSS is not perfect. Its main goal is to replace our aging federal fleet, yet nearly 12 years into the large ship programs we have delivered only five large vessels. In the 1980s, over a similar period, Canada delivered 15 large ships.
The difference is easy to define. We transitioned from a commercially influenced model, emphasizing on-time delivery, to an approach that promotes process, governance and control over that of ship delivery. In the 1980s, we estimated the internal government cost of managing new ship construction at between 4% to 6% of contract value. Today it is around 14% to 16%. To replace roughly 36 large ships, Canada must budget now for 40.
Canadians live in volatile and worrying times, yet we struggle greatly to provide our Canadian Armed Forces and Coast Guard with essential tools and capabilities. We desperately need to fast-track ship construction to address growing threats to Canada's sovereignty and other vital interests. Our NSS should be a unique, made-in-Canada solution to the growing challenges we face. It should also help create a stable and sustainable domestic industry, with export potential.
In our time of great need, Canada's procurement process hampers agility, innovation and execution. This has contributed to well-documented cost overruns and delivery delays. The backlog means we are performing vessel life extensions on ships up to 50 years old.
We can fix this with pragmatic and proven solutions that combine the best of government and commercial practices. A real-world example is the United Kingdom's refreshed national shipbuilding strategy. It seeks to build competitively priced ships today to create future exports. A more commercial approach is paying off. The U.K. has developed a warship for a fixed price of U.S. $336 million. Five have already been sold to foreign governments.
Canada can, and I would say should, do the same. Canada is able to build competitively, and there is increasing demand for the high-quality products, including complete vessels, that Canadian shipbuilders and our supply chain can produce. Major global fleet renewal is an export opportunity for Canada. Other nations empower industry to drive shared success, and we should consider doing the same.
A key step is to rationalize government oversight on projects with more control, delegation and responsibility given to the contractor, who is, after all, the shipbuilding expert and responsible for delivering the vessels.
For example, one of our members had a recent major project that used a commercially based procurement strategy and project management approach whereby only the classification society and a single overseer were used by Canada to monitor shipyard performance. The project finished on time and on budget, meeting all contractual requirements. While this may only be one element, it speaks volumes as to what can be done with a more commercial approach that uses industry norms rather than government norms.
Let's look at the ship design stage. Canada has a high-quality design capability, and there is ample domestic capacity for the earlier steps in the design cycle. These early stages form a material contribution to innovation in Canadian shipbuilding. This capacity must not be allowed to stagnate due to project delays. Deepening the Canadian capability for early-stage design will, over time, provide capacity and cost reductions in the later stages of the design process.
On the same topic, establishing and freezing the vessel requirements and build specifications at the earliest possible time will prevent design changes, which we all know lead to delays and cost increases.
In terms of the specification setting and the design change process, the optimal outcome will always be a trade-off between government's operational, regulatory and performance requirements and the shipyard's capability to procure for and build the design to a competitive price and on schedule. It is essential to contract in such a way as to achieve these objectives. The design of an affordable ship will always be a compromise. Much as when we go to a car dealer asking for every option and getting exactly what we want, it's no different with ships.
The shipyard that will build the ship should be contracted to undertake the full design process. Doing less than that adds delays, since the shipyard will always take any design and run a second exercise—often lengthy and expensive, and avoidable—to ensure that the resulting ship is buildable.
As I mentioned, CMISA also encourages locking in the ship requirements at an early stage. From that point on, it needs to be about delegating the project to the shipbuilder and limiting customer approvals to those that are strictly necessary, such as those associated with safety and with meeting the requirements of the classification society.
Coming back to what we said about embracing commercial practices, we must look at fixed or effective target price incentive mechanisms instead of just cost-plus-profit contracting, where achievable. With fixed or target incentive prices, the shipbuilder is held to account and/or incentivized on its ability to deliver projects on cost and on schedule against specifications and performance criteria that have not been unnecessarily changed. This thinking is aligned with commercial contracting and has had a positive impact on shipyard efficiency and responsiveness to customers' needs in cases where it has been applied.
Fixed or effective target incentive contracting can be achieved within PSPC's existing framework. It does, however, mean a change to today's norms and standards. In fact, if our industry is to succeed, it means a reset of certain specific shipbuilding contracting standard practices used by Canada. By “succeeding”, I mean delivering performing ships on the original schedule and budget agreed to by the shipbuilder.
Our members also want more involvement in the build process. To this end, there are other innovations Canada should consider adopting, such as the distributed block assembly method. This is successful in other countries, and CMISA members support more direct involvement in the production of ships and build strategies that create multiple build sites—
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for being here today.
Mr. Kendrick, I'd like to begin by saying that I found your testimony to be very incisive.
Our study of the national shipbuilding strategy showed that the situation was problematic. The purpose of this study was to determine where our money was going. From the very outset of the study, all of the witnesses we heard seem to indicate that Canada is truly dealing with an enormous management problem.
In your testimony, you gave concrete examples, particularly in connection with your involvement in the development of the Arctic/Offshore Patrol Ship, the AOPS, and with the associated costs.
The naval strategy introduced by the Conservatives, whose intent was to be effective and to establish specific contracts with shipyards so that we could work within established budgets and timelines, is not working. It's highly problematic. In fact you said so elsewhere in your testimony.
How could we begin today two deal with the situation? I believe that it's been a financial disaster, one of the worst scandals in Canada, a squandering of billions of dollars, particularly given that we don't have the capacity required to defend the country as we should.
What would be the best way of settling the problem quickly? As you mentioned in your last sentence, we need to come to a decision quickly.
What should we do?
:
This is the $64-billion question. Unfortunately, I don't have a simple answer for it, partly because neither I nor anybody on this committee or anybody else seems to have a real handle on what is happening. The project's process was supposed to be fair, open and transparent. It's not. It is completely opaque.
When I was involved in redoing the cost assessment for the polar icebreaker a few years back, my team asked for productivity data from the NSS yards, which had already been working for some time on it. We were refused it. How can you develop a cost estimate if you don't know what the productivity metrics are? I know more about productivity metrics in U.S. shipyards, U.K. shipyards and South African shipyards than I do about Canadian shipyards.
I don't know what the contracts are. The contracts have not been publicized. The contract values have not been publicized. We cannot find this information, and until we move to a more transparent system, unfortunately, it's difficult to see what the solutions are likely to be.
I very much agree with some of the suggestions made by Mr. Schmidt, whom I've known for many years, about measures that could be taken on the government side. The measures could be taken on the industry side as well. I think we need to move towards, as he said, much more fixed-price, fixed-schedule contracting and accountability for things that fail to meet those targets.
That's my quick answer for now.
:
Thank you very much, Madame Vignola.
Yes, I would like to emphasize that I am not against any sector of the Canadian marine industry, whether that be the designers, the builders or the equipment suppliers. I have been a firm supporter of that throughout my career in Canada, and I've participated in many unpaid activities—to the regret of my wife—that have dragged me to meetings all over the place.
We have the ability to build a capability in Canada better than we have today, but we have to go about it the right way. There are problems that come from the government side. There are problems that come from the management side within the shipyards. In my opinion, the latter are greater.
Just to give one example, the original design of the AOPS was purely commercial. It was designed to use commercial equipment, the cheapest possible commercial equipment. It was a design-to-cost project to keep the costs down. As soon as the project was awarded under NSS, the program office in DND was told that the shipyard was going to make it an ITAR project under the international arms trade regulations, because of the people they wanted to use to support them from the U.S.
That instantly caused a huge cost increase. It caused an increase in complexity. It required us to go and search for drawings that had been given to companies around the world and get them back because they weren't authorized to have them any longer. That was purely a shipyard decision, and there are many other shipyard decisions I could point to that have had the effect of driving up the price.
My concern here is that the government had lost control.
I said to the program manager at the time, “Why are you allowing this to happen?” The answer: “Oh, the shipyard tells us they need to.”
The shipyard is not in control. These are government ships.
That's the sort of messaging I've heard repeatedly about NSS, which is an indication to me that the system as designed, the system as implemented, is not a good system.
:
This is another interesting aspect.
If you are forced to compete on price, if you're forced to meet a price, then you accept risk. Another thing the shipyards have been doing is transferring as much risk as possible to their suppliers and contractors. They're not making a balanced decision on where risk should be.
As soon as you transfer a risk to an equipment supplier or to any other party involved, their price goes up. You've avoided the risk, but you're still able to charge the same amount of profit on the project. You're boosting the price and you're gaining profit at no particular risk to yourself.
There needs to be some form of price discipline. That price discipline, in part, needs to be based on the government's having informed knowledge of what the price of these ships should be. Many other governments around the world give their government projects to the shipyards in their countries. They do that all the time, whether it be the Dutch, the French, the Italians or whoever. They understand how to control cost.
A good example from the Netherlands is that when the Dutch government was given a quote for building a new ship, they took pieces of that away from the shipyard and did it in third-party facilities because they thought the cost of those elements was unreasonable.
These are the sorts of measures you can take. Control the costs. Make sure that's being done in an intelligent manner.
:
The navy needs ships. The navy needs ships that are first-class fighting ships. They need to be able to afford enough of them to have a meaningful fleet.
The Type 26, which is the basis for CSC, may be an excellent ship; I'm actually not sure. There are concerns that have been raised about aspects of that ship. All ships have problems, but if it's going to cost that much money, then we're not going to be able to afford them. The British have given up on having to buy their original-sized fleet.
Let's say that we can emulate U.S. yards in our productivity and our quality. I would love to think that we can do better, because we're Canadians, so of course we can do better, except when it comes to hockey teams.
The U.S. equivalent at the moment, the new Constellation-class frigate, is costing about $1.4 billion a copy. You can get 15 of those for $20 billion. Our PBO is saying $80 billion; our navy is saying around $60 billion, maybe. It's three times as much. Why is that? We must delve into this to figure it out. Otherwise, our navy is not going to be a navy. It's going to be six AOPS and a couple of other old ships.
We've got to do better than this. We have to give the navy the tools that they need. We're living in a dangerous world and a dangerous neighbourhood. That's the challenge we have to meet.
How do we get from the $60-billion and the $80-billion fleet to the $20 billion fleet? What are we going to do to achieve that? Can Canada afford a $60-billion fleet?
Think of what $40 billion can do in terms of affordable housing, infrastructure, child care and all of the other things that are important to people, such as pharmacare and dentistry. How far does $40 billion go? It goes a long way.
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If we're talking just ships, sir, I think what we're saying is that it's the contracting process. If we're talking large ships, we've selected shipyards to build those ships. We've assigned those ships.
The problem is when we get into contracts, or how we get into contracting and how we manage the projects. The requirements drive us to have to put quite a bit of extra overhead into the way we manage. As we like to say, we should be spending the money on steel, not paper. That's not to say anything against the paper industry, but we have to find ways of streamlining the way we're doing the contracting. If we can do that, we can deliver the ships more quickly. A design phase shouldn't take us 24 or 36 months. We should be reducing that to half and finding ways we can bring those costs down.
That's the key message we're trying to bring from the association. If we do that, we're building ships faster. We're also generating more capability within our membership. We're delivering more product, and at the end of the day, the federal fleet is being renewed.
To Shannon's earlier point, we can keep up. We believe we can keep up to the labour requirements both internally.... All our members have internal training programs, and some of them are affiliated with American or European partners. They can bring or help bring those trained people to Canada so that we can build our own capability internally.