The Hamilton Spectator

Canada’s automakers may get cash infusion

Federal and Ontario government­s talking investment­s

- ANDY BLATCHFORD

OTTAWA — The federal and Ontario government­s are actively discussing major investment­s in the big automakers that could total hundreds of millions of dollars.

Following the recent conclusion of labour negotiatio­ns, the auto companies are in talks with the government­s about investing in a sector critical to the Ontario and Canadian economies.

Federal Economic Developmen­t Minister Navdeep Bains said Ottawa is open to providing support to the automakers to help them expand their footprints in Canada.

But Bains did not discuss what a potential deal could look like — nor would he share details on how much federal support the government might commit.

“It’s still early stages, so it’s difficult to lock down a number at this stage, but we’re clearly willing to be at the table,” Bains said recently. “Right now, we’re just in the process of engaging with the auto companies to look at investment opportunit­ies.”

He did say, however, that the Trudeau government has a particular interest in investment­s within the more-technologi­cally advanced and research-focused areas of the auto sector.

Bains, whose department is overseeing the creation of an innovation agenda that it hopes will eventually boost the economy, said one of the key goals for the government is making sure Canada is on the “cutting edge of the car of the future.”

The three largest North American automakers recently committed to pump more than $1.5 billion combined into their Canadian operations following contract talks with their unionized workers. General Motors Canada and Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s Canada each agreed to invest $554 million, while Ford Canada said it would spend about $700 million.

Jerry Dias, president of the Unifor union, said in an interview he didn’t know exactly how much money has been at the centre of the government talks.

“In its entirety, I would expect hundreds of millions,” Dias said when pressed for a ballpark figure of the total government investment.

“But I’m guessing.”

He added that the auto companies are only interested in grants and not loans, including those that have been offered in the past through the eight-year-old federal Automotive Innovation Fund.

Tony Faria, an expert on the Canadian auto sector, said that in the past the Ontario and federal government­s have each come up with 10 per cent of the size of the total investment­s by the companies.

Faria, a professor at the University of Windsor, said, if applied in the current context of the automakers’ recent $1.5-billion investment, Ontario and Ottawa would each invest $150 million — for a total of $300 million.

A major difference, he added, is that Ottawa has provided loans in the past and has avoided making direct grants. Competing regions such as some U.S. states and Mexico have provided grants to auto companies, he said.

“(The automakers) have not been pleased in the past with the federal government making their contributi­on a low-interest, repayable loan,” Faria said.

Canada’s automotive sector employs about 125,000 people in assembly and parts production. That includes Toyota’s plants in Cambridge and Woodstock, which together employ about 8,600 people.

 ?? CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Ford Edges sit on a production line in the Ford assembly plant in Oakville.
CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Ford Edges sit on a production line in the Ford assembly plant in Oakville.

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