Windsor Star

Aerospace sector looking to get back on feds’ radar

- EMILY JACKSON

Canada’s aerospace industry got dealt a reality check when the federal government didn’t select it for the superclust­er initiative, a $950-million investment into five sectors the feds are betting on for future growth, says Jean Charest, the former Quebec premier and current aerospace industry champion.

Even though the aerospace industry contribute­d 190,000 jobs and $25 billion to Canada’s economy in 2017, according to industry statistics, it fell off the government’s radar at a time that it wants support to compete against both establishe­d players and developing countries, including China. “It’s fair to say the superclust­er episode for the industry was a wake-up call,” Charest said Monday at an Aerospace Industries Associatio­n of Canada event in Toronto. “All of a sudden there’s a realizatio­n that maybe we took for granted that people recognize what the industry is and what it does.”

The industry wants to win public support and get back on the government’s agenda. The industry group hired Charest to lead an initiative to develop a long-term strategy for the sector’s future with industry, government­s, educationa­l institutes and other players. It aims to present this plan before the 2019 election. As it stands, Canada is one of the top five global players in the aerospace industry. But if it wants to stay there, it needs to define a long-term vision and then determine what needs to be done to get there, Charest said. Options include re-training workers for the aerospace industry, in which the average worker is 54 years old, according to AIAC president Jim Quick. “We cannot assume that we’re going to remain a major player in this industry if things remain the way they are,” Charest said in a discussion with Quick moderated by The Logic editor-in-chief David Skok. The industry became a powerhouse in the first place because of government support, particular­ly after the Second World War. But other industries have been in the spotlight recently, namely the automotive sector. The aerospace industry wants to avoid a scenario such as the pending closure of the General Motors Co. plant in Oshawa, Ont., where the disappeara­nce of high-paying jobs is blamed on a lack of adaptation to future demand.

“Part of the argument we have to make to the Government of Canada is we don’t have to wait till Oshawa happens in the aeronautic­al industry,” Charest said. This can be a tough sell given the public perception of the aerospace industry in general and Bombardier as a vehicle for public subsidies. Charest argues the money invested has most often been from repayable loans that have been reimbursed. The industry doesn’t have a specific ask for politician­s as it hasn’t finalized its vision. But Charest argued “every single country ” provides “better and more” government support to their aerospace industries than Canada does.

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