:
I call this meeting to order.
Welcome to meeting number 27 of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Science and Research. Today's meeting is taking place in a hybrid format, pursuant to the House Order of June 23, 2022. Members are attending in person in the room and remotely using the Zoom application.
Pursuant to Standing Order 108(3)(i) and the motion adopted by the committee on Monday, September 26, 2022, we are beginning our study of citizen scientists.
I would like to take a few moments to make a few comments for the benefit of the witnesses and members. Please wait until I recognize you by name before speaking. For those taking part by video conference, click on your microphone icon to activate your mike, and please mute yourself when you are not speaking. For interpretation, for those on Zoom you have the choice at the bottom of your screen of floor, English, or French. For those in the room, you can use the earpiece and select the desired channel.
I remind you that all comments should be addressed through the chair. For members in the room, if you wish to speak, please raise your hand. For members on Zoom, please use the “raise hand” function. The clerk and I will manage the speaking order as best we can, and we appreciate your patience and understanding in this regard.
In accordance with our routine motion, I am informing the committee that all witnesses have completed their prior connection tests in advance of the meeting.
I'd like to welcome our two guests today. Online we have Dr. Nemer, and in person we have Dr. Quirion.
We're going to start with opening statements from each witness, and we're going to go in the room to start off.
Dr. Quirion, I welcome you to take the floor for five minutes. At the tail end of the five minutes, if you could attempt to look up, I will try to get your attention to speed it up if you're approaching that magical five-minute mark.
With that, I'll turn the floor over to our first witness.
:
Mr. Chair, members of the committee, colleagues and friends, I am happy to be back with you. Thank you for the invitation.
Today, I have chosen a somewhat unique and possibly slightly provocative angle to talk to you about participatory science and citizen engagement, so I am going to give a very brief summary of the initiatives undertaken by my office and the Fonds de recherche du Québec in this area. I will focus on three of our programs: Audace, Dialogue, and Engagement. I will be speaking mainly about the Engagement program.
One of the main triggers that prompted us to develop our citizen science strategy relates to disinformation, misinformation and fake news. I have been very concerned about these phenomena for several years, so it started well before the COVID‑19 pandemic. Of course, it was all exacerbated with the pandemic.
How do we combat fake news and disinformation? How do we counteract them? It is not simple, as we all know, but it is truly essential for our democracies.
A number of studies show that increasing scientific literacy, that is, providing life-long science education, is one of the most effective measures for combating disinformation. We must therefore urgently increase scientific literacy in Canada. We are all working on this together, but we must do a lot better.
We should also be offering our fellow citizens of all ages better education about social media and how they work, so that everyone is really able to choose the most reliable sites. The fact that a site is at the top of the list of results when you do a Google search does not necessarily mean it is the best one. It is therefore very important to have better education on all aspects of this.
So how can citizen engagement and participatory science help to combat disinformation? What approach do we use at the office of the Chief Scientist of Quebec? Our Engagement program has existed for about three years and invites our fellow citizens to submit ideas for research projects to us. We then meet with the people who have proposed them, and we put them in touch with researchers who are interested in the subject in question and have expertise in the field. Then they train a small team that will work together to develop a much more detailed version of the project, something that often takes six to 12 months.
Next, the project is evaluated by a peer committee that includes members of the public. For the projects that are funded, we grant funding on the order of $50,000 over two years, and the researchers and individual members of the public work together to ensure that the project produces results. The way we build science and develop our arguments, the advancements, setbacks and uncertainties—it is all very important, increases scientific literacy, and helps to combat disinformation and fake news.
One of the primary objectives of the Engagement program is better understanding of the scientific approach. Participants in the program are very proud of their projects and become valuable spokespersons for explaining science, research and scientific data where they live: in their families, in their communities, and, very often, in the media and to you, our members of Parliament.
So it is one small step, but it helps us to advance our battle against disinformation and the lack of scientific literacy in Quebec. We hope to be able to ensure that over the coming years, programs like this will be developed all over Canada.
Thank you.
:
Good morning, everyone.
[English]
Thank you, Mr. Chair, for giving me the opportunity to discuss with you this important subject today.
As a society we find ourselves today renegotiating many of our systems and institutions that were affected by the trials of the past three years. Going forward, we need to consider citizen science as an integral part of our strategies for empowering individuals and communities, for building trust in our institutions and for sustaining our democracy.
Citizen science, which is also called participatory research and which is a collaborative approach to research between public volunteers and professionals, operates in a variety of disciplines with a common value being that it opens up the scientific enterprise to people beyond the professional communities.
In the past 10 years alone, citizen science has helped to make advancement in several fields, including space, the environment, agriculture and health. The discovery of five new exoplanets, achievement of the first crowdsourced redesign of a protein widely used in synthetic chemistry, help in designing ways to prevent the COVID virus from entering cells and the discovery of entirely new aspects of the earth's magnetic field are examples of things to which citizen science has contributed.
[Translation]
Clearly, participatory research can be enormously beneficial for science. It can help us meet our data needs, support multidisciplinary collaboration and promote open science objectives by encouraging public involvement. But it can also be enormously beneficial for individuals, communities and society as a whole.
By opening up science to non-professionals, we can enhance science literacy and improve public understanding of the evidence used to make policies. We can help to equip people with the tools they need to identify and resist misinformation and make informed decisions about their lives and their communities.
[English]
Around the world, countries and jurisdictions are adopting and supporting citizen science initiatives, and I salute the work that is being carried out in Quebec by my colleague Rémi Quirion.
Both the U.S. and the European Union currently fund major projects. In fact, since 2017, the U.S. has had a Crowdsourcing and Citizen Science Act, which aims to promote innovation through open and voluntary scientific collaboration. Australia, too, has implemented a citizen science association. Germany has created a federally funded and centralized platform to promote it. The Netherlands implemented a process to facilitate the input of citizens and scientists in the Dutch research agenda, and Belgium has done something similar.
These are all very promising initiatives that are helping to connect people around the world to their communities, environment, and the science and innovation enterprise. Here at home, we have some citizen science initiatives, both within and outside of the federal government, and they are doing great things.
[Translation]
The federal citizen science portal currently lists 55 projects across the country, from Abeilles citoyennes, which collects data on pollinator species in Quebec’s agricultural regions, to the Colony B online game in which players grow and identify diverse clusters of bacteria that contribute to research on the human microbiome.
Within the federal government, the Public Health Agency is engaging people through FluWatchers, an initiative in which volunteers help to track influenza and COVID‑19 in Canada.
And Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada is supporting Canada’s first Indigenous-led living lab. This laboratory brings farmers, Indigenous people and scientists together to define what the future of healthy and sustainable farm ecosystems can look like.
[English]
Building on these projects, colleagues at Health Canada are leading a multidisciplinary interdepartmental initiative reflected in Canada's fifth national action plan on open government. The aim is to promote citizen science through a framework that supports capacity building, as well as the required governance and infrastructure.
[Translation]
Canada would be well served to introduce citizen science early in school curricula. It is an effective way to raise scientific awareness and training in an inclusive manner, as well as encourage greater participation. Doing so would also be in keeping with the 2019 G7 science advisors’ recommendation that countries rethink their scientific education and equip students to be able to undertake either participatory or professional research later on.
:
I think there are a lot of opportunities there.
We're lucky, I'll say, in Canada—in Quebec, in my case. There is a lot of interest in science, how science is built, from our citizens. Compared to some other countries, there is a lot of interest, so it's a matter of connecting, making connections with them, of academics in universities, in colleges and in the private sector linking with citizens and asking them what they think. Often, they have great suggestions, great ideas. We get a lot of projects. Every time we have a project competition in environment, in health, in arts and culture....
They say, for example, “There's a lot of blue algae in the lake. We did not used to see that. Why is that? Can we work with scientists on that?” Then citizen scientists, they do the project like that. In Montreal, women on the street, homeless women, started a research project to try to help these women so that they could get back to a bit more of a normal life.
I think there are a lot of opportunities. The key, for me, is to treat them as equals. It's not someone like me with a Ph.D. above them and they work, in a sense, for me. No, they are really equal, codesigners of the project. That's very critical.
Basically, the key thing.... The first time we launched the call, we did that too quickly. They submitted proposals, and we linked them with scientists. Then they started the project.
Now they submit the project, and for about six months, sometimes a year, they interact with the scientific community to express their knowledge, to explain their knowledge to the academic community. They build the program together. They work together. If there is a publication at the end, both of them are part of it. It's not just the scientist. You give them reward, in a sense, and they are very proud.
I must say that every time we support teams like that, the scientific community, of course, is happy about it, but I'm more impressed by the citizen who became.... They'd say, “I had an idea. I had some knowledge. They listened to me, and now we work together,” and they continue. After the end of the project, they continue to work together. That's something we need to nurture in the future.
Welcome back to our witnesses.
I would like to start with Dr. Nemer. Your opening sentence caught my attention as it relates to your comments around citizen science and sustaining our democracy. Actually, I should reference that Dr. Quirion mentioned disinformation and misinformation in his opening. We've heard a lot of information from past witnesses in other studies about disinformation and information floating through, of course, social media—where else would we find that—with an attempt to undermine not just science but public health initiatives and information that has helped us get through the pandemic.
I was a member of the board of health on my municipal council before I arrived here. I experienced those comments and the push-back to public health professionals who were trying to assist, whether it was on the use of masks, the social distancing or the benefits of getting the vaccine. We've seen this constant trend, since the beginning of the pandemic, to try to undermine the efforts of the science that helped us get through the pandemic. Scientific initiatives have helped over the last 30 to 40 years to get us to where we are today.
With that preamble, Dr. Nemer, I want you to further elaborate on how citizen science helps us with sustaining our democracy. I think those were your comments in your first sentence.
:
Thank you very much for this question.
Citizens make decisions every day. That, of course, affects our institutions and our democracy. It's very important that they be able to judge the integrity, validity and quality of the information, and the quality of the evidence. We can also put all of these into the sentence on the scientific method, which is going about in a rigorous, analytical manner proving or disproving your hypothesis.
This, in many ways, is what citizen science also teaches you. It's not only about gathering information and data. You have to do it in a way that's consistent and is going to end up being representative. If you generalize conclusions, then you have to be sure that this is actually reflective of everything.
It's all of these things that you learn to question that will help to tell you if something is true information or disinformation. You're going to be able to question the integrity, the source and the method by which the information is being disseminated and has been gathered.
:
Maybe I could add a bit. I talked about scientific literacy. Certainly, one way is to increase scientific literacy all across Canada. I think we saw that with the pandemic.
It's very important to do that from day one, almost in primary school. Young kids are very curious. They want to learn things, so to explain a bit—of course, with simple words—what science is and the fun of science.... It's not only that it's hard, tough and difficult, but that it's fun to do science. You keep doing that with teenagers, because at that point, it's a bit more challenging with some of them. There are some who believe in that and who have fun in science, even though they find it hard, so finding ways to interest them in science....
Throughout life, I think it's the duty of government—local, provincial and national—to offer opportunities to increase scientific literacy here in Canada and, I hope, all over the world. It's key to democracy, I think.
:
Thank you for your question.
The objective of the Réseau francophone international en conseil scientifique is to expand the capacities for giving scientific advice to elected representatives and senior officials all over the francophone world, in the francophone countries of Europe and Africa and in Canada, including Quebec, of course. By expanding those capacities and the connections between the academic world and elected representatives and senior officials, we are indirectly facilitating everything associated with citizen science or participatory science.
Elected representatives, parliamentarians, will hear more about science and scientific advice. Since they will be familiar with citizen science, they will be able to discuss it with the people in their ridings, to find out what should be done.
In addition to Quebec and Canada, we would also like to have comparisons at the international level, in particular regarding climate change, sustainable development and the global pandemic we are all familiar with.
:
Thank you to both witnesses for being here today.
As a matter of full disclosure, this study was my idea and I'm glad we're doing it. I think it's very important. It's good to hear some of the initial discussions. My full disclosure is that I used to work in the citizen science world before becoming an MP. At least that was part of my world, both as a professional scientist and as a citizen scientist, so this is something that's very dear to my heart.
I just wanted to bring up some things that Mr. Lobb said. There are citizens out there who are on the land every day—whether they're farmers, fishers, hunters or birders—who are experts in their own right. You can think of citizen science as ordinary citizens doing things for real scientists who just need a lot of bodies across the country. That's one aspect of it. In many cases, the people gathering this data.... I come from the bird biology world. Most of the keen birders out there know a lot more about birds than bird biologists, so it's really valuable to engage them.
I just wanted to perhaps direct a question to Dr. Nemer about the work that some of these groups do, whether they're NGOs or people participating directly in federal government programs. Can she maybe tell us something about the scope of these things?
One real value of citizen science is that it can happen over decades. We have citizen science programs that have been going on since the year 1900. They take place all across the continent. That sort of data is impossible to gather from just a single lab.
Dr. Nemer, maybe you can expand on some of the programs that the federal government itself uses to gather important data for its work, whether it's in environment, weather and climate, or things that are important to Canadians, which really rely on citizen science.
:
Thank you for the question.
Mr. Chair, allow me to express my admiration to MP Cannings for the extraordinary work he's done to promote citizen science. I think we're reaping the benefits of what he started and we need to amplify it.
A number of examples that I listed include a lot of work in terms of the biodiversity—whether it's the birds, the bees or the lakes—in terms of health.
Maybe I'll step back for a second and say that when we talk about citizen science, very often we think about data gathering. Data gathering is absolutely part of it. It is essential and it really enhances the repertoire of the information we have, especially in a country like ours, which is so immense. There's no way we could have information about every corner of the country.
There are other examples as well that really don't depend on data gathering, but actually on sort of playing with the data to provide solutions or to create, as I said, structures for proteins. This is important because it allows development of a drug or medicine for certain diseases. I think we have to appreciate people's imaginations and how astute they can be in terms of using the data for things that others have not thought about.
I just want to give you an example, if I may. During the pandemic, one of my youth council members started a project to basically gather information about PPE littering in nature, along the coast. She developed an app called Marine Debris Tracker. She got many other people involved in this. Actually, it's now funded by National Geographic.
We can have programs that are funded by our own government, and we can also have important programs that link internationally and are funded by international organizations.
:
Thank you very much to my colleague, MP Sousa.
To both our witnesses, welcome back.
It's always a pleasure to have you both here with us and to get your knowledge and expertise in these areas.
I was listening intently. For me, when I first heard the term that was brought up by Mr. Cannings, “citizen scientists”, to be honest I wasn't really sure what it meant. I'm glad we're here, and I'm glad for the information you gave us, Monsieur Quirion.
[Translation]
You spoke a lot about the Engagement program, which tries to combat disinformation in social media by making it possible for the public and researchers to work together. I believe that is very important.
[English]
For both of you, the question I have, and I know you have talked about this, so I will brief, is how we can get more Canadians involved in science in their communities, and what role youth can play in developing citizen science.
What can you share with us on this committee that we can work towards?
:
Thank you very much for this question, which is very important indeed.
In my office, we're working to develop, if you will, best practices on how to do this. Of course, knowledge gathered by indigenous communities belongs to the indigenous communities. They're the holders of the information. We need to engage, build trust at the start and develop ways that are agreeable to the communities sharing the knowledge...and under which terms.
I must say, though, that weaving together indigenous knowledge and knowledge gathered from western science is extremely important if we want to provide proper evidence on which to build policies in many areas. I would say it's a work in progress. In my group, we have a researcher in residence who comes from the indigenous communities.
Within the Government of Canada, we have help to develop what we call the I-STEM cluster—indigenous and STEM. We're working with indigenous scientists so we can be guided on how to get to a stage where we have both knowledge systems informing our policies.
I want to reassure my colleagues: we are here to answer their questions. The Standing Committee on Science and Research is probably one of the most important House of Commons committees. I want to thank each of its members for sitting on the committee.
Before starting my remarks, I would like to repeat what a scientist recently told me: today's science is tomorrow's economy.
I am pleased to be appearing for the first time before this committee, which is an essential one, given the importance of science, and especially of research, for Canada's future and prosperity.
As a member of a government that places great importance on science and on making evidence-based decisions, I am grateful for this committee's excellent work. I would also note that I supported creating this committee during the last session of Parliament.
Today, I am here to discuss two subjects of interest to members of the committee: research and scientific publication in French, an issue that interests me since I come from the Canadian education system in French myself, and international moonshot programs.
Our government has worked hard to support a robust science and research base in Canada and to ensure that we are prosperous and, certainly, that we are competitive. As is the case for all government policies and programs, the initiatives are based on the values of equity, diversity and inclusion.
Just as diversity is a major asset for Canadian research, our linguistic duality is our hallmark and adds to the diversity of ideas, connections and collaborations in Canada and on the international scene. We can all agree on that. As a former minister of foreign affairs, I can say that the fact that our country has two official languages is an essential asset in the economy of the 21st century.
Our linguistic duality also makes us a premier destination for French-speaking researchers worldwide, and that is a good thing. That is why we fund research and research training in either language and we encourage education in French, which is vital and very important to me, as we all know.
For example, grants to assist academic journals have been established to help in exploring innovative ideas and to cover the costs associated with publishing scientific articles. Numerous publications supported by these grants are in French or support the publication of research in French.
There are also science communication skills development grants that support organizations offering communications training for students, scholarship holders and professors in the fields of science, technology, engineering and mathematics.
The Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada conducts two annual campaigns to promote the sciences: Science Odyssey and Science Literacy Week, both of which actively involve francophones and promote French-language content.
I am always ready to hear about new ideas and international best practices that allow for greater equity in the funding and distribution of research in French. I give you my word that we will continue doing our best to accomplish this.
[English]
That brings me to the other topic of interest at this committee, moon shot research. You kind of know me by now. I've been ambitious, and I want Canada to have the same level of ambition.
It is vital that we focus our attention not only on the immediate matters we are facing as a nation but also on the long-term challenges and opportunities we face as a society, and I would say, indeed, globally. I want Canada to lead. That's always where I put us when it comes to science, technology and innovation.
Never before in our lifetimes has the importance of science-led decision-making been so starkly apparent as during the COVID-19 pandemic. I would say, in a way, that Canadians have reconnected with science. Certainly, we all owe a debt of gratitude to the exceptional scientists across Canada and, I would say, the world, who have worked tirelessly to help us combat the virus.
[Translation]
To make sure that we are even better prepared for future health emergencies, the Government of Canada is making strategic investments in cutting edge life sciences and biotechnology research.
[English]
Colleagues, you will allow me to express with great pride that we have Moderna now, which has invested significantly in our country. When I started as minister, our fill and finish capacity on the vaccines was around 30 million doses. I think today it's fair to say that we're above 600 million doses.
[Translation]
We also have to make sure that we can accelerate the development and commercialization of world-class Canadian research on vaccines and treatments. We must also make sure that we have the essential research talent to build a more robust biomanufacturing ecosystem.
[English]
This is why the government launched the biomanufacturing and life sciences strategy, to ensure that Canada has the skills, the experience and the expertise to develop vaccines and therapeutics as a global leader in the life sciences field. The strategy is already showing success through our nearly $2-billion investment. We're seeing global vaccine producers coming to Canada.
Vaccines are just one. The government is generating big and bold ideas, as you've seen, whether it's quantum AI or cybersecurity, which I think are going to be key to the underpinning growth in our national economy.
Mr. Chair, I would have more to say, but I see that you are impatient and that colleagues are impatient to ask me questions.
I'm very pleased to be here.
[Translation]
Thank you for inviting me here today, ladies and gentlemen.
:
Thank you. I am very glad to be asked that question. Yes, I come from Shawinigan. Because I did a large majority of my studies in French, I understand the importance of French in scientific research.
There actually is good news on this subject. I am told that a quarter of the reviewers on the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council selection committees are francophones. I am also told that about 73% of the grant applications submitted in French are accepted. Our rate is actually higher than what we might expect. The reality is that the research councils are subject to the Official Languages Act. If you want to know more, my colleagues will be able to answer.
Personally, Mr. Lauzon, I make sure that I promote all of the initiatives. As I said in my opening remarks, there are various initiatives that mobilize francophones, not just in urban centres, but also in rural areas. We have to make sure that our programs encourage young people. We know that Canada's strength lies in our talent, today. If we want to prosper in the future, we have to focus on talent.
We are in the process of studying what is done elsewhere and we are finding that the situation is the same in Germany, Italy and other countries when it comes to the language of publications: English is used in a large proportion of them. That is also true in the other G7 countries.
We must therefore make extra efforts to support this process. I can tell you that this is a concern. In my view, this linguistic duality, which is important, is part of diversity. Even though these decisions are made by the research councils, our colleagues around the table are well aware of our interest and the role we play, as francophones. We have to be sure that all of the programs function, and even that translation of scientific publications is facilitated. There are policies, but we have also invested funds in this.
If you would like more details, I can ask Iain Stewart to tell you exactly what his council has done in this regard.
Thank you, Minister, for being here today.
At our last meeting about moon shots, one of our last witnesses on that idea was Dr. Alexandre Blais from the Université de Sherbrooke talking about quantum physics. One of the points he really emphasized during his talk about how we should do moon shots was that, before we could even think about it, we have to support our young scientists. You mentioned supporting young scientists yourself in your opening remarks.
However, while we are putting big money into big ideas, we seem to have left our young scientists completely behind in Canada. You have members from the tri-council here, and they provide valuable scholarships that keep these young people alive, basically, while they're doing their master's thesis, their Ph.D. or their post-doctoral fellowship. However, certainly for the graduate scholarships, those funding levels haven't changed in 20 years and these people are living in poverty.
When the Ontario science policy network did a survey in 2021, it found that 45% of respondents don't have enough to get by. They struggle financially every month with 87% reporting stress and anxiety about their finances. More than half are living with no savings at all. They found that 32% of graduate students considered dropping out of their program due to financial concerns.
We've been telling the government about this for a year now, it seems. I was hoping to see something in the fall economic statement about it. I'm praying that there's something in the budget coming up that will address this problem in a serious way. These people I think are 48% behind where they should be, had we kept up with inflation.
What I'm saying is that we can make it our first moon shot to make sure that our young scientists don't have to live in poverty and worry about that, and instead get on with their lives and do the good work that they need to do. We're losing 38% of our Ph.D.s overseas every year because conditions are better in every country except Canada.
I'm just imploring you to fix this and make it our first big moon shot.
:
First of all, I would like to say thank you, MP Cannings, because you've been a big voice. I think we meet some of the same people. Thank you for bringing the human dimension to all that, because it's all about people, at the end of the day. I'm grateful for the work you're doing. I say that as a colleague who esteems you very much and what you're doing.
I am as preoccupied as you are in terms of the relative numbers we've seen and where we need to be and where we are. Trust me. I'm always raising my voice to do more for our students, for our graduates. It's certainly something we're looking at. You're quite right. We have made record investments, since 2016, of $14 billion, but we need to also measure the relative performance in terms of these grants to the students. I'm very well aware of the statistics. I can assure you that it's something I take very seriously. I think Canada's success in the future depends on talent, and talent is the young people you talk about. We've met the same people. I think we were together in some of these fora.
I'm very sensitive to that. As you appreciate, I don't have the last say in all of that, but certainly it's something that is very top of mind. I want to thank all the young Ph.D. students, researchers and graduates who are coming to Canada. We're still a big magnet for talent, I can tell you. If we've been able to attract the likes of Stellantis in Canada, BASF, GM and POSCO, they realize....
Of the five things I say, the first thing is always about talent. We are a magnet for talent. We need to continue to be, and I'm grateful for your help in making sure we achieve that.
Thank you, Minister Champagne, for taking time out of your busy schedule to join our committee today. I know that you're extremely busy.
Thank you, also, to all of the other witnesses who are here with you today. It's very important.
Getting back to the area of talent, we know how important it is to have equity, diversity and inclusion at our post-secondary institutions and the representation of life experience in the research being produced.
Can you tell the committee about the measures your department and the government are taking to ensure that diversity is a key driver in Canadian research, for example, gender diversity and ethnic diversity?
:
One of which I am most proud.... When I started as minister—and I think I alluded to that when I did my first comments—our capacity in biomanufacturing was wanting, and thanks to the good work of Iain Stewart, who is here, we now have a biomanufacturing facility. We wanted private and public facilities. We have the likes of Moderna, and Sanofi came.
For me, when I had that role, there was nothing more important than protecting the health and safety of Canadians. Like I said, we didn't choose the pandemic. We don't know what may come next, but we chose to be better prepared. I think this is probably a legacy for generations. We invested about $2 billion to be more resilient, and I think that is something significant.
I also think of the Artemis mission in space. Canada is going to be the second nation in the world to have someone who is going to go around the moon. That's a big thing we should all be proud of. I was talking to , and I said I wanted the next astronaut to go to inspire a generation. I said, “Marc, you inspired me when I was young, and I want the next astronaut we have to inspire the next generation.”
We're going to go to the moon. The plan is to go beyond to Mars, and Canada is at the centre of that mission with NASA. It is amazing what we achieved. The James Webb telescope, we're part of that initiative. We've been doing great things, and I think the world is looking to us to partner with that, and I'm very proud.
Obviously, we can always do more. We're looking at that. We've done great things on genomics. We are doing great things on quantum, like I said, and in artificial intelligence, but what I want is to have world-class moon shot projects that the world will recognize. We're negotiating our Horizon Europe with the European Commission. I just hosted the EU commissioner in the last few days, and we talked about that because we're going to be part of the largest research project probably in the world, or at least in Europe. This is where Canada belongs. We belong at the head table, and that's my vision. It's always to lead, to have the best and certainly to push on talent.
Minister, you said earlier that the shift to English in the sciences was also happening on the international scene, particularly in France and Germany. I am quite aware of that. However, there is a marked difference between the situation in those countries and ours, and that is what I want to draw your attention to.
Here, the shift is not to a foreign language, which is neutral; rather, it is to another national language, the effect of which is assimilation. This needs no further proof, since your government is the first to recognize the decline of French in Canada.
I want to understand. From your point of view, are you fully cognizant of this situation?
So I am going to review the ideas I have already submitted and add a bit more. I hope your colleagues will be able to take note of them and draw on them extensively.
We have to take a look at the self-assessment done by reviewers at the funding councils of their own language proficiency, to make sure they are truly bilingual and truly understand French.
We could fund the Service d'aide à la recherche en français as Acfas has requested and as the Government of Quebec has already been doing for almost two years.
We could implement linguistic incentive criteria for the Canada research chairs. You are doing that at present on issues of gender and underrepresentation of people of various ethnic origins, but at present no language criteria are applied to funding of the Canada research chairs.
We can also create a permanent committee to monitor the language situation in the sciences and the status of French in this field.
In 2016, your department created the Advisory Committee on Federal Support for Fundamental Science, the Naylor committee, which produced the report entitled "Investing in Canada's Future: Strengthening the Foundations of Canadian Research". You can do the same thing in French.
Minister, I would like to turn back to moon shots.
I keep hearing on the radio and reading in newspapers and magazines, that the moon shot of our time is the fight against climate change. We can talk about AI, quantum, hydrogen and all of those things, but that's what we really have to put our efforts into and not just redouble but make 10 times...really increase our ambition and efforts.
One of our witnesses here, on the moon shot study, was Seth Klein. You may have heard of his work. He wrote a book called A Good War that compared what Canada did in the Second World War to what we need to do for climate action. He showed what we can do if we put our minds to it, and we found some of that out during the COVID pandemic. He outlined all the ways Canada tackled real difficulties during the Second World War and did amazing things, and he put down ways we should and could tackle climate change here in Canada.
I wonder whether you, as the minister of everything, have discussed this with your colleagues. Have you considered what we should be doing? We have to do a very great amount more than what we are doing on climate change.
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He's probably listening today. I will buy a copy and read it.
To your point, I would say that investment in AI is helping climate change, because, with AI, we can do the modelling for climate change better, for example. I think about quantum—I'm giving you examples where I think these technologies are cross-sector. With quantum, for example, we say we can develop better materials and save time developing these materials. In a way, we're helping the planet, because if we have a more sustainable economy it helps everyone.
I agree with you totally. That's the direction I have been given. The biggest moon shot project we have is climate change, but there is a lot of definition around that. Even when you invest in AI, you're indirectly investing. The Space Agency investment we made on monitoring the ozone project is helping that. RADARSAT through the Space Agency is helping with climate change. Climate change is across different things. I think these investments are helping, in that sense.
I agree with you. I'm always mindful that this is the biggest challenge we have. We always have that in our minds as we look at these investments.
Welcome, Minister.
I'll try to get us back on the moon shot questioning. That's why you're here.
Last week, you were in Hamilton, in my municipality, with the and cabinet. You had the opportunity to tour McMaster University's innovation park. Dr. Emadi was there, highlighting their work on autonomous vehicles as well as other AI-related work they're doing at McMaster.
One theme that came up during the tour—not just from the professor but from the students—was that there's a lot of private sector support. A lot of government resources have been invested in the facility—like, for that building you were walking through, obviously. Lots of federal, as well as provincial, dollars and investments have been made.
They were seeking more assistance along the lines of operational dollars. The automotive industries, in that instance, are providing funds for the students and the faculty to conduct the work they're conducting. Their question was this: What role does the federal government play on a go-forward basis from an operational perspective?
I know you're very familiar with the budget lines in your ministry. What role do you foresee us playing in the next couple of years, specifically with McMaster, but also with other institutions like it that are conducting very important research?
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Thank you for the question.
For the folks at McMaster, I like you. I love you, actually. You do great work. It's always a pleasure to go there. We were well received. Everyone was kind.
In a sense you're right. McMaster, like a number of centres, had a head start. I think that we have everything to win in the economy of the 21st century. When you talk about autonomous vehicles and when you talk about AI, we're certainly punching above our weight.
Historically, the Government of Canada has been more on the capex side. With the Canada Foundation for Innovation, that's where we've been. That's why we have these programs where we invested billions, actually, to help a number of institutions across the country really have the means of our ambitions to upgrade the labs, the facilities and all that.
I am very familiar that. When it comes to the opex side of things, universities have asked if we can help them there. We're going to be looking at that.
The other way we can look at that is through partnerships. You mentioned the automotive sector. I'm very grateful for the work of Professor Bouchard, who was part of this science review panel. One thing I'm trying to look at is what they do in the United States with partnerships with industry to try to bring more money to the table, so that it's not just taxpayers' money or government. Is there a way, like you see in the United States with some big corporations, where there are these tech parks where they can partner?
I think I see that in action. For electric vehicles, in my discussions with automakers, they're willing to be part of the solution. They understand that talent is going to be key to their success as much as our success, and they want to be part of that. That's a model.
I would say that the work of Professor Bouchard is going to be informative in trying to find the right balance between that. Obviously, if you finance opex, there's a bit less money for capex, so you need to have this kind of approach. I'm trying to look at—and I'm sure it's going to appeal to my colleagues on the other side, as well—how the private sector can play a role in that, so it's not just public funds. It's something we can do. I think it's in everyone's best interests.