Retail Commodity Survey: CVs for Total Sales (fourth quarter 2017)

Retail Commodity Survey: CVs for Total Sales (fourth quarter 2017)
Table summary
This table displays the results of Retail Commodity Survey: CVs for Total Sales (fourth quarter 2017). The information is grouped by NAPCS-CANADA (appearing as row headers), and Quarter (appearing as column headers).
NAPCS-CANADA Quarter
2016Q4 2017Q1 2017Q2 2017Q3 2017Q4
Total commodities, retail trade commissions and miscellaneous services 1.83 1.34 0.73 0.43 0.72
Retail Services (except commissions) [561]  1.85 1.35 0.72 0.43 0.71
Food at retail [56111]  3.57 2.29 1.07 1.25 1.89
Soft drinks and alcoholic beverages, at retail [56112]  2.61 3.46 0.63 0.74 0.77
Clothing at retail [56121] 3.14 2.16 0.70 0.77 0.73
Footwear at retail [56122] 3.40 2.52 1.50 1.40 1.12
Jewellery and watches, luggage and briefcases, at retail [56123] 4.42 2.61 1.35 2.35 1.50
Home furniture, furnishings, housewares, appliances and electronics, at retail [56131] 3.77 2.94 1.58 0.93 0.75
Sporting and leisure products, at retail [56141] 4.09 3.23 2.88 2.16 1.63
Motor vehicles at retail [56151] 4.52 2.86 2.18 1.05 0.97
Recreational vehicles at retail [56152] 7.85 5.97 4.25 2.02 2.71
Motor vehicle parts, accessories and supplies, at retail [56153] 3.27 2.51 2.10 1.09 0.98
Automotive and household fuels, at retail [56161] 3.02 3.27 1.90 1.86 3.05
Home health products at retail [56171] 2.73 3.56 2.37 2.07 4.01
Infant care, personal and beauty products, at retail [56172] 3.59 3.30 2.06 2.51 4.03
Hardware, tools, renovation and lawn and garden products, at retail [56181]  3.97 3.54 1.35 1.02 1.07
Miscellaneous products at retail [56191] 1.94 2.70 1.84 2.02 2.04
Total retail trade commissions and miscellaneous services 1 2.09 1.94 1.77 1.41 1.93
1Comprises the following North American Product Classification System (NAPCS): 56211, 58122, 58141, 57111, 841, 58121, 58111, 53112 and 58131.

Food Services and Drinking Places (Monthly): CVs for Total Sales by Geography - February 2017 to February 2018

C.V. Results for Food Services and Drinking Places (Monthly): CVs for Total Sales by Geography - February 2017 to February 2018
Table summary
This table displays the results of Food Services and Drinking Places (Monthly): CVs for Total Sales by Geography - February 2017 to February 2018. The information is grouped by Province (appearing as row headers), Month, and percentage (appearing as column headers).
Geography Month
201702 201703 201704 201705 201706 201707 201708 201709 201710 201711 201712 201801 201802
percentage
Canada 0.65 0.63 0.67 0.69 0.68 0.75 0.69 0.66 0.67 0.64 0.63 0.7 0.65
Newfoundland and Labrador 1.39 1.66 1.31 1.66 1.46 2.13 1.59 1.24 1.73 1.17 1.36 1.23 1.32
Prince Edward Island 3.89 3.58 2.88 2.56 2.69 7.93 4.65 5.41 3.37 4.1 4.07 2.8 1.87
Nova Scotia 2.93 3.18 2.45 2.7 3.17 5.3 4.72 3.35 3.09 3.46 3.41 2.29 3.74
New Brunswick 3.83 1.51 1.2 1 1.61 1.99 1.08 1.63 1.21 1.26 2.94 2.55 2.65
Québec 1.36 1.09 1.4 1.54 1.49 1.9 1.78 1.71 1.69 1.6 1.43 1.52 1.36
Ontario 1.17 1.15 1.24 1.25 1.26 1.31 1.17 1.08 1.17 1.14 1.13 1.24 1.19
Manitoba 1.75 1.81 1.88 1.94 2.06 1.82 1.46 2.04 1.92 1.71 1.71 1.98 2.19
Saskatchewan 1.98 1.94 2.02 1.63 1.8 1.22 1.38 1.29 1.36 1.26 1.56 1.31 1.53
Alberta 1.14 1.16 1.15 1.16 1.03 1.13 1.22 1.33 1.22 1.11 1.11 1.28 0.98
British Columbia 1.93 2.03 1.96 2.04 1.98 2.03 2 1.89 1.83 1.74 1.77 2.15 1.9
Yukon Territory 4.1 3.46 1.87 3.47 3.4 3.19 4.01 3.87 4 2.99 3.75 4.27 4.02
Northwest Territories 0.36 0.33 0.48 0.51 0.52 0.59 0.71 0.75 0.7 0.85 0.87 1.13 1.15
Nunavut 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.19

Retail Trade Survey (Monthly): CVs for Total sales by geography - February 2018

CVs for Total Sales by Geography
Table summary
This table displays the results of CVs for Total Sales by Geography. The information is grouped by Geography (appearing as row headers), Month, 201802 calculated using percentage units of measure (appearing as column headers).
Geography Month
201802
%
Canada 0.55
Newfoundland and Labrador 0.92
Prince Edward Island 1.58
Nova Scotia 4.70
New Brunswick 1.64
Québec 1.33
Ontario 1.07
Manitoba 1.15
Saskatchewan 2.19
Alberta 0.93
British Columbia 1.17
Yukon Territory 0.54
Northwest Territories 0.12
Nunavut 1.05

Why do we conduct this survey?

This survey collects data on capital and repair expenditures in Canada. The information is used by Federal and Provincial government departments and agencies, trade associations, universities and international organizations for policy development and as a measure of regional economic activity.

Your information may also be used by Statistics Canada for other statistical and research purposes.

Your participation in this survey is required under the authority of the Statistics Act.

Other important information

Authorization to collect this information

Data are collected under the authority of the Statistics Act, Revised Statutes of Canada, 1985, Chapter S-19.

Confidentiality

By law, Statistics Canada is prohibited from releasing any information it collects that could identify any person, business, or organization, unless consent has been given by the respondent, or as permitted by the Statistics Act. Statistics Canada will use the information from this survey for statistical purposes only.

Record linkages

To enhance the data from this survey and to reduce the reporting burden, Statistics Canada may combine the acquired data with information from other surveys or from administrative sources.

Data-sharing agreements

To reduce respondent burden, Statistics Canada has entered into data-sharing agreements with provincial and territorial statistical agencies and other government organizations, which have agreed to keep the data confidential and use them only for statistical purposes. Statistics Canada will only share data from this survey with those organizations that have demonstrated a requirement to use the data.

Section 11 of the Statistics Act provides for the sharing of information with provincial and territorial statistical agencies that meet certain conditions. These agencies must have the legislative authority to collect the same information, on a mandatory basis, and the legislation must provide substantially the same provisions for confidentiality and penalties for disclosure of confidential information as the Statistics Act. Because these agencies have the legal authority to compel businesses to provide the same information, consent is not requested and businesses may not object to the sharing of the data.

For this survey, there are Section 11 agreements with the provincial and territorial statistical agencies of Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Quebec, Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, British Columbia, and the Yukon. The shared data will be limited to information pertaining to business establishments located within the jurisdiction of the respective province or territory.

Section 12 of the Statistics Act provides for the sharing of information with federal, provincial or territorial government organizations. Under Section 12, you may refuse to share your information with any of these organizations by writing a letter of objection to the Chief Statistician, specifying the organizations with which you do not want Statistics Canada to share your data and mailing it to the following address:

Chief Statistician of Canada
Statistics Canada
Attention of Director, Enterprise Statistics Division
150 Tunney's Pasture Driveway
Ottawa, Ontario
K1A 0T6

You may also contact us by email at statcan.esdhelpdesk-dsebureaudedepannage.statcan@statcan.gc.ca or by fax at 613-951-6583.

For this survey, there are Section 12 agreements with the statistical agencies of Prince Edward Island, the Northwest Territories and Nunavut as well as the Bank of Canada, Environment Canada, Infrastructure Canada, National Energy Board and Natural Resources Canada.

For agreements with provincial and territorial government organizations, the shared data will be limited to information pertaining to business establishments located within the jurisdiction of the respective province or territory.

Business or organization and contact information

1. Please verify or provide the business or organization's legal and operating name and correct where needed.

Note: Legal name modifications should only be done to correct a spelling error or typo.

Legal Name
The legal name is one recognized by law, thus it is the name liable for pursuit or for debts incurred by the business or organization. In the case of a corporation, it is the legal name as fixed by its charter or the statute by which the corporation was created.

Modifications to the legal name should only be done to correct a spelling error or typo.

To indicate a legal name of another legal entity you should instead indicate it in question 3 by selecting 'Not currently operational' and then choosing the applicable reason and providing the legal name of this other entity along with any other requested information.

Operating Name
The operating name is a name the business or organization is commonly known as if different from its legal name. The operating name is synonymous with trade name.

  • Legal name
  • Operating name (if applicable)

2. Please verify or provide the contact information of the designated business or organization contact person for this questionnaire and correct where needed.

Note: The designated contact person is the person who should receive this questionnaire. The designated contact person may not always be the one who actually completes the questionnaire.

  • First name
  • Last name
  • Title
  • Preferred language of communication
    • English
    • French
  • Mailing address (number and street)
  • City
  • Province, territory or state
  • Postal code or ZIP code
  • Country
    List of countries
    • Afghanistan
    • Aland Islands
    • Albania
    • Algeria
    • American Samoa
    • Andorra
    • Angola
    • Anguilla
    • Antarctica
    • Antigua and Barbuda
    • Argentina
    • Armenia
    • Aruba
    • Australia
    • Austria
    • Azerbaijan
    • Bahamas
    • Bahrain
    • Bangladesh
    • Barbados
    • Belarus
    • Belgium
    • Belize
    • Benin
    • Bermuda
    • Bhutan
    • Bolivia
    • Bonaire, Sint Eustatius and Saba
    • Bosnia and Herzegovina
    • Botswana
    • Bouvet Island
    • Brazil
    • British Indian Ocean Territory
    • Brunei Darussalam
    • Bulgaria
    • Burkina Faso
    • Burma (Myanmar)
    • Burundi
    • Cambodia
    • Cameroon
    • Canada
    • Cape Verde
    • Cayman Islands
    • Central African Republic
    • Chad
    • Chile
    • China
    • Christmas Island
    • Cocos (Keeling) Islands
    • Colombia
    • Comoros
    • Congo, Republic of the
    • Congo, The Democratic Republic of the
    • Cook Islands
    • Costa Rica
    • Côte d'Ivoire
    • Croatia
    • Cuba
    • Curaçao
    • Cyprus
    • Czech Republic
    • Denmark
    • Djibouti
    • Dominica
    • Dominican Republic
    • Ecuador
    • Egypt
    • El Salvador
    • Equatorial Guinea
    • Eritrea
    • Estonia
    • Ethiopia
    • Falkland Islands (Malvinas)
    • Faroe Islands
    • Fiji
    • Finland
    • France
    • French Guiana
    • French Polynesia
    • French Southern Territories
    • Gabon
    • Gambia
    • Georgia
    • Germany
    • Ghana
    • Gibraltar
    • Greece
    • Greenland
    • Grenada
    • Guadeloupe
    • Guam
    • Guatemala
    • Guernsey
    • Guinea
    • Guinea-Bissau
    • Guyana
    • Haiti
    • Heard Island and McDonald Islands
    • Holy See (Vatican City State)
    • Honduras
    • Hong Kong Special Administrative Region
    • Hungary
    • Iceland
    • India
    • Indonesia
    • Iran
    • Iraq
    • Ireland, Republic of
    • Isle of Man
    • Israel
    • Italy
    • Jamaica
    • Japan
    • Jersey
    • Jordan
    • Kazakhstan
    • Kenya
    • Kiribati
    • Korea, North
    • Korea, South
    • Kosovo
    • Kuwait
    • Kyrgyzstan
    • Laos
    • Latvia
    • Lebanon
    • Lesotho
    • Liberia
    • Libya
    • Liechtenstein
    • Lithuania
    • Luxembourg
    • Macao Special Administrative Region
    • Macedonia, Republic of
    • Madagascar
    • Malawi
    • Malaysia
    • Maldives
    • Mali
    • Malta
    • Marshall Islands
    • Martinique
    • Mauritania
    • Mauritius
    • Mayotte
    • Mexico
    • Micronesia, Federated States of
    • Moldova
    • Monaco
    • Mongolia
    • Montenegro
    • Montserrat
    • Morocco
    • Mozambique
    • Namibia
    • Nauru
    • Nepal
    • Netherlands
    • New Caledonia
    • New Zealand
    • Nicaragua
    • Niger
    • Nigeria
    • Niue
    • Norfolk Island
    • Northern Mariana Islands
    • Norway
    • Oman
    • Pakistan
    • Palau
    • Panama
    • Papua New Guinea
    • Paraguay
    • Peru
    • Philippines
    • Pitcairn
    • Poland
    • Portugal
    • Puerto Rico
    • Qatar
    • Réunion
    • Romania
    • Russian Federation
    • Rwanda
    • Saint Barthélemy
    • Saint Helena
    • Saint Kitts and Nevis
    • Saint Lucia
    • Saint Martin (French part)
    • Saint Pierre and Miquelon
    • Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
    • Samoa
    • San Marino
    • Sao Tome and Principe
    • Sark
    • Saudi Arabia
    • Senegal
    • Serbia
    • Seychelles
    • Sierra Leone
    • Singapore
    • Sint Maarten (Dutch part)
    • Slovakia
    • Slovenia
    • Solomon Islands
    • Somalia
    • South Africa, Republic of
    • South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands
    • South Sudan
    • Spain
    • Sri Lanka
    • Sudan
    • Suriname
    • Svalbard and Jan Mayen
    • Swaziland
    • Sweden
    • Switzerland
    • Syria
    • Taiwan
    • Tajikistan
    • Tanzania
    • Thailand
    • Timor-Leste
    • Togo
    • Tokelau
    • Tonga
    • Trinidad and Tobago
    • Tunisia
    • Turkey
    • Turkmenistan
    • Turks and Caicos Islands
    • Tuvalu
    • Uganda
    • Ukraine
    • United Arab Emirates
    • United Kingdom
    • United States
    • United States Minor Outlying Islands
    • Uruguay
    • Uzbekistan
    • Vanuatu
    • Venezuela
    • Viet Nam
    • Virgin Islands, British
    • Virgin Islands, United States
    • Wallis and Futuna
    • West Bank and Gaza Strip (Palestine)
    • Western Sahara
    • Yemen
    • Zambia
    • Zimbabwe
  • Email address
  • Telephone number (including area code)
  • Extension number (if applicable)
  • Fax number (including area code)

3. Please verify or provide the current operational status of the business or organization identified by the legal and operating name above.

  • Operational
  • Not currently operational

Why is this business or organization not currently operational?

  • Seasonal operations
    • When did this business or organization close for the season? Date
    • When does this business or organization expect to resume operations? Date
  • Ceased operations
    • When did this business or organization cease operations? Date
    • Why did this business or organization cease operations?
      • Bankruptcy
      • Liquidation
      • Dissolution
      • Other
        Specify the other reasons for ceased operations
  • Sold operations
    • When was this business or organization sold? Date
    • What is the legal name of the buyer?
  • Amalgamated with other businesses or organizations
    • When did this business or organization amalgamate? Date
    • What is the legal name of the resulting or continuing business or organization?
    • What are the legal names of the other amalgamated businesses or organizations?
  • Temporarily inactive but will re-open
    • When did this business or organization become temporarily inactive? Date
    • When does this business or organization expect to resume operations? Date
    • Why is this business or organization temporarily inactive?
  • No longer operating due to other reasons
    • When did this business or organization cease operations? Date
    • Why did this business or organization cease operations?

4. Please verify or provide the current main activity of the business or organization identified by the legal and operating name above.

Note: The described activity was assigned using the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS).

This question verifies the business or organization's current main activity as classified by the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). The North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) is an industry classification system developed by the statistical agencies of Canada, Mexico and the United States. Created against the background of the North American Free Trade Agreement, it is designed to provide common definitions of the industrial structure of the three countries and a common statistical framework to facilitate the analysis of the three economies. NAICS is based on supply-side or production-oriented principles, to ensure that industrial data, classified to NAICS , are suitable for the analysis of production-related issues such as industrial performance.

The target entity for which NAICS is designed are businesses and other organizations engaged in the production of goods and services. They include farms, incorporated and unincorporated businesses and government business enterprises. They also include government institutions and agencies engaged in the production of marketed and non-marketed services, as well as organizations such as professional associations and unions and charitable or non-profit organizations and the employees of households.

The associated NAICS should reflect those activities conducted by the business or organizational units targeted by this questionnaire only, as identified in the 'Answering this questionnaire' section and which can be identified by the specified legal and operating name. The main activity is the activity which most defines the targeted business or organization's main purpose or reason for existence. For a business or organization that is for-profit, it is normally the activity that generates the majority of the revenue for the entity.

The NAICS classification contains a limited number of activity classifications; the associated classification might be applicable for this business or organization even if it is not exactly how you would describe this business or organization's main activity.

Please note that any modifications to the main activity through your response to this question might not necessarily be reflected prior to the transmitting of subsequent questionnaires and as a result they may not contain this updated information.

The following is the detailed description including any applicable examples or exclusions for the classification currently associated with this business or organization.

Description and examples

  • This is the current main activity.
  • This is not the current main activity.

Please provide a brief but precise description of this business or organization's main activity.
e.g., breakfast cereal manufacturing, shoe store, software development

Main activity

5. You indicated that [activity] is not the current main activity. Was this business or organization's main activity ever classified as: ?

  • Yes
  • No

When did the main activity change? Date

6. Please search and select the industry classification code that best corresponds to this business or organization's main activity.

How to search:

  • if desired, you can filter the search results by first selecting this business or organization's activity sector
  • enter keywords or a brief description that best describes this business or organization main activity
  • press the Search button to search the database for an activity that best matches the keywords or description you provided
  • then select an activity from the list.

Select this business or organization's activity sector (optional)

  • Farming or logging operation
  • Construction company or general contractor
  • Manufacturer
  • Wholesaler
  • Retailer
  • Provider of passenger or freight transportation
  • Provider of investment, savings or insurance products
  • Real estate agency, real estate brokerage or leasing company
  • Provider of professional, scientific or technical services
  • Provider of health care or social services
  • Restaurant, bar, hotel, motel or other lodging establishment
  • Other sector

Enter keywords or a brief description, then press the Search button

7. You have indicated that the current main activity of this business or organization is: [Main activity] Are there any other activities that contribute significantly (at least 10%) to this business or organization's revenue?

  • Yes, there are other activities.
  • No, that is the only significant activity.

Please provide a brief but precise description of this business or organization's secondary activity.
e.g., breakfast cereal manufacturing, shoe store, software development

8. Approximately what percentage of this business or organization's revenue is generated by each of the following activities?

When precise figures are not available, please provide your best estimates.

Revenue by activity
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  Percentage of revenue
Main activity  
Secondary activity  
All other activities  
Total percentage  

Reporting period information

1. What are the start and end dates of this organization's most recently completed fiscal year?

Note: For this survey, the end date should fall between April 1, YYYY and March 31, YYYY.

Here are twelve common fiscal periods that fall within the targeted dates:

  • May 1, YYYY to April 30, YYYY
  • June 1, YYYY to May 31, YYYY
  • July 1, YYYY to June 30, YYYY
  • August 1, YYYY to July 31, YYYY
  • September 1, YYYY to August 31, YYYY
  • October 1, YYYY to September 30, YYYY
  • November 1, YYYY to October 31, YYYY
  • December 1, YYYY to November 30, YYYY
  • January 1, YYYY to December 31, YYYY
  • February 1, YYYY to January 31, YYYY
  • March 1, YYYY to February 28, YYYY
  • April 1, YYYY to March 31, YYYY .

Here are other examples of fiscal periods that fall within the required dates:

  • September 18, YYYY to September 15, YYYY ( e.g. , floating year-end)
  • June 1, YYYY to December 31, YYYY ( e.g. , a newly opened business).

Fiscal Year Start date

Fiscal Year-End date

2. What is the reason the reporting period does not cover a full year?

Select all that apply.

  • Seasonal operations
  • New business
  • Change of ownership
  • Temporarily inactive
  • Change of fiscal year
  • Ceased operations
  • Other reason - specify:

What are Capital Expenditures?

Gross Capital Expenditures - Land and Residential Construction

3. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for land and residential construction?

Land: Capital expenditures for land should include all costs associated with the purchase of the land that are not amortized or depreciated. Improvements of land should be reported in Non-Residential Construction.

Residential Construction: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for residential structures (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees).

Include the housing portion of multi-purpose projects and of townsites.
Exclude buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities ( e.g. , some student and senior citizens residences) and associated expenditures on services.

Gross capital expenditures for land and residential construction
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000
Land  
New Assets  
Residential construction  
New Assets  
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets  
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  

Gross Capital Expenditures - Non-residential construction

4. For the YYYY fiscal year, did this organization have capital expenditures for non-residential construction?

Include renovations and acquisitions to work in progress.

Non-Residential Construction: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential building and engineering construction (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.

Include:

  • manufacturing plants, warehouses, office buildings, shopping centres, etc.
  • roads, bridges, sewers, electric power lines, underground cables, etc.
  • the cost of demolition of buildings, land servicing and site preparation
  • leasehold and land improvements
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • townsite facilities such as streets, sewers, stores and schools
  • buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities ( e.g. , some student and senior citizen residences) and associated expenditures on services
  • all preconstruction planning and design costs such as engineer and consulting fees and any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation, etc.
  • Yes
  • No

 In order to reduce future follow-up, please select one of the following options.

You could also make corrections to the current cycle by pressing the Previous button.

You have not reported any capital expenditures on non-residential construction for YYYY, but did in the previous year.

  • I confirm that all values are correct.
  • I am unable to confirm that all values are correct.

5. For the YYYY fiscal year, which non-residential construction assets were acquired?

Include renovations and acquisitions to work in progress.

Select all that apply.

Construction structures should be classified to an asset according to its principal use unless it is a multi-purpose structure where we would like you to separate the components. The cost of any machinery and equipment which is an integral or built-in feature of the structure ( e.g. , elevators, heating equipment, sprinkler systems, environmental controls, intercom systems, etc. ) should be reported as part of that structure as well as landscaping, associated parking lots, etc.

  • Industrial Building
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Manufacturing plants
    • Industrial depots and service buildings
    • Farm buildings and structures
    • Other industrial sites and structures - specify:
  • Commercial Building
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Industrial laboratories, research and development centres
    • Warehouses
    • Service stations
    • Office buildings
    • Hotels
    • Restaurants
    • Shopping centres, plazas, malls and stores
    • Theatres and halls
    • Indoor recreational facilities
    • Other collective dwellings
    • Student residences
    • Airports and other passenger terminals
    • Communications buildings
    • Sports facilities with spectator capacity
    • Other commercial properties, not elsewhere classified - specify:
  • Institutional Building
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Schools, colleges, universities and other educational buildings
    • Religious centres and memorial sites
    • Hospitals
    • Nursing homes, homes for the aged
    • Health centres, clinics and other health care buildings
    • Daycare centres
    • Libraries
    • Historical sites
    • Museums
    • Public security facilities
    • Other institutional properties - specify:
  • Marine Engineering
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Seaports
    • Canals and waterways
    • Marinas and harbours
    • Other marine infrastructure - specify:
  • Transportation Engineering
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Parking lots and garages
    • Highway and road structures and networks
    • Runways (include lighting)
    • Railway lines
    • Bridges
    • Tunnels
    • Other land transportation infrastructure, not elsewhere classified - specify:
  • Waterworks Engineering
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Water filtration plants
    • Water supply infrastructure - specify:
  • Sewage Engineering
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Sewage treatment plants
    • Sewage treatment infrastructure - specify:
  • Electric Power Engineering
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Steam production plants
    • Nuclear production plants
    • Hydro-electric power plants
    • Other Power generating plants
    • Power transmission networks
    • Power distribution networks
  • Communication Engineering
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Telecommunications transmission cables and lines (except optical fibre)
      e.g., aerial, underground and submarine
    • Telecommunications transmission optical fibre cables
      e.g., aerial, underground and submarine
    • Telecommunications transmission support structures - towers, poles, conduit
    • Other communications networks - specify:
  • Oil and Gas Engineering
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Oil refineries
    • Natural gas processing plants
    • Pipelines
    • Development drilling for oil and gas
    • Production facilities in oil and gas extraction
    • Enhanced recovery projects
    • Site development and other pre-mining costs
    • Geological, geophysical and other exploration and evaluation costs
    • Other oil and gas infrastructure - specify:
  • Mining
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Mine surface buildings (except for beneficiation)
    • Mine buildings for beneficiation treatment of minerals
    • Mine structures
    • Tailing disposal systems, settling ponds
    • Mine-site development
  • Oil, Gas and Mineral Exploration and Evaluation
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Exploration drilling for oil and gas
    • Other oil and gas exploration
    • Mineral exploration
  • Other Engineering
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Pollution abatement and control
    • Outdoor recreational facilities
    • Waste disposal facilities
    • Irrigation networks
    • Improved land
    • Reclaimed land
    • Flood protection infrastructure
    • Site remediation
  • Other engineering works, not elsewhere classified - specify:

New Assets: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.

Purchase of Used Canadian Assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately in this column.

Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling and Restoration: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.

Expected Useful Life of Assets: Report the expected life of the asset in years.

6. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for industrial building construction?

Non-Residential Construction: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential building and engineering construction (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.

Include:

  • manufacturing plants, warehouses, office buildings, shopping centres, etc.
  • roads, bridges, sewers, electric power lines, underground cables, etc.
  • the cost of demolition of buildings, land servicing and site preparation
  • leasehold and land improvements
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • townsite facilities such as streets, sewers, stores and schools
  • buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities ( e.g. , some student and senior citizen residences) and associated expenditures on services
  • all preconstruction planning and design costs such as engineer and consulting fees and any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation, etc.
Gross capital expenditures for industrial building construction
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected Life (Years)
Manufacturing plants    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Industrial depots and service buildings    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Farm buildings and structures    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Other industrial sites and structures    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    

7. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for commercial building construction?

Non-Residential Construction: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential building and engineering construction (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.

Include:

  • manufacturing plants, warehouses, office buildings, shopping centres, etc.
  • roads, bridges, sewers, electric power lines, underground cables, etc.
  • the cost of demolition of buildings, land servicing and site preparation
  • leasehold and land improvements
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • townsite facilities such as streets, sewers, stores and schools
  • buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities ( e.g. , some student and senior citizen residences) and associated expenditures on services
  • all preconstruction planning and design costs such as engineer and consulting fees and any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation, etc.
Gross capital expenditures for commercial building construction
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected Life (Years)
Industrial laboratories, research and development centres    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Warehouses    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Service stations    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Office buildings    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Hotels    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Restaurants    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Shopping centres, plazas, malls and stores    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Theatres and halls    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Indoor recreational facilities    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Other collective dwellings    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Student residences    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Airports and other passenger terminals    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Communications buildings    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Sports facilities with spectator capacity    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Other commercial properties, not elsewhere classified    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    

8. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for institutional building construction?

Non-Residential Construction: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential building and engineering construction (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.

Include:

  • manufacturing plants, warehouses, office buildings, shopping centres, etc.
  • roads, bridges, sewers, electric power lines, underground cables, etc.
  • the cost of demolition of buildings, land servicing and site preparation
  • leasehold and land improvements
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • townsite facilities such as streets, sewers, stores and schools
  • buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities ( e.g. , some student and senior citizen residences) and associated expenditures on services
  • all preconstruction planning and design costs such as engineer and consulting fees and any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation, etc.
Gross capital expenditures for institutional building construction
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected Life (Years)
Schools, colleges, universities and other educational buildings    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Religious centres and memorial sites    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Hospitals    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Nursing homes, homes for the aged    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Health centres, clinics and other health care buildings    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Daycare centres    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Libraries    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Historical sites    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Public security facilities    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Museums    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Other institutional properties    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    

9. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for marine engineering construction?

Non-Residential Construction: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential building and engineering construction (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.

Include:

  • manufacturing plants, warehouses, office buildings, shopping centres, etc.
  • roads, bridges, sewers, electric power lines, underground cables, etc.
  • the cost of demolition of buildings, land servicing and site preparation
  • leasehold and land improvements
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • townsite facilities such as streets, sewers, stores and schools
  • buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities ( e.g. , some student and senior citizen residences) and associated expenditures on services
  • all preconstruction planning and design costs such as engineer and consulting fees and any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation, etc.
Gross capital expenditures for marine engineering construction
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected Life (Years)
Seaports    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Canals and waterways    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Marinas and harbours    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Other marine infrastructure    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    

10. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for transportation engineering construction?

Non-Residential Construction: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential building and engineering construction (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.

Include:

  • manufacturing plants, warehouses, office buildings, shopping centres, etc.
  • roads, bridges, sewers, electric power lines, underground cables, etc.
  • the cost of demolition of buildings, land servicing and site preparation
  • leasehold and land improvements
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • townsite facilities such as streets, sewers, stores and schools
  • buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities ( e.g. , some student and senior citizen residences) and associated expenditures on services
  • all preconstruction planning and design costs such as engineer and consulting fees and any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation, etc.
Gross capital expenditures for transportation engineering construction
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected Life (Years)
Parking lots and garages    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Highway and road structures and networks    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Runways (include lighting)    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Railway lines    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Bridges    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Tunnels    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
     
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    

11. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for waterworks engineering construction?

Non-Residential Construction: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential building and engineering construction (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.

Include:

  • manufacturing plants, warehouses, office buildings, shopping centres, etc.
  • roads, bridges, sewers, electric power lines, underground cables, etc.
  • the cost of demolition of buildings, land servicing and site preparation
  • leasehold and land improvements
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • townsite facilities such as streets, sewers, stores and schools
  • buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities ( e.g. , some student and senior citizen residences) and associated expenditures on services
  • all preconstruction planning and design costs such as engineer and consulting fees and any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation, etc.
Gross capital expenditures for waterworks engineering construction
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected Life (Years)
Water filtration plants    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Water supply infrastructure    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    

12. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for sewage engineering construction?

Non-Residential Construction: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential building and engineering construction (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.

Include:

  • manufacturing plants, warehouses, office buildings, shopping centres, etc.
  • roads, bridges, sewers, electric power lines, underground cables, etc.
  • the cost of demolition of buildings, land servicing and site preparation
  • leasehold and land improvements
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • townsite facilities such as streets, sewers, stores and schools
  • buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities ( e.g. , some student and senior citizen residences) and associated expenditures on services
  • all preconstruction planning and design costs such as engineer and consulting fees and any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation, etc.
Gross capital expenditures for sewage engineering construction
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected Life (Years)
Sewage treatment plants    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Sewage treatment infrastructure    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    

13. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for electric power engineering construction?

Non-Residential Construction: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential building and engineering construction (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.

Include:

  • manufacturing plants, warehouses, office buildings, shopping centres, etc.
  • roads, bridges, sewers, electric power lines, underground cables, etc.
  • the cost of demolition of buildings, land servicing and site preparation
  • leasehold and land improvements
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • townsite facilities such as streets, sewers, stores and schools
  • buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities ( e.g. , some student and senior citizen residences) and associated expenditures on services
  • all preconstruction planning and design costs such as engineer and consulting fees and any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation, etc.
Gross capital expenditures for electric power engineering construction
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected Life (Years)
Steam production plants    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Nuclear production plants    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Hydro-electric power plants    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Other Power generating plants    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Power transmission networks    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Power distribution networks    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    

14. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for communication engineering construction?

Non-Residential Construction: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential building and engineering construction (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.

Include:

  • manufacturing plants, warehouses, office buildings, shopping centres, etc.
  • roads, bridges, sewers, electric power lines, underground cables, etc.
  • the cost of demolition of buildings, land servicing and site preparation
  • leasehold and land improvements
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • townsite facilities such as streets, sewers, stores and schools
  • buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities ( e.g. , some student and senior citizen residences) and associated expenditures on services
  • all preconstruction planning and design costs such as engineer and consulting fees and any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation, etc.
Gross capital expenditures for communication engineering construction
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected Life (Years)
Telecommunications transmission cables and lines (except optical fibre) - (e.g., aerial, underground and submarine)    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Telecommunications transmission optical fibre cables (e.g., aerial, underground and submarine)    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Telecommunications transmission support structures - towers, poles, conduit    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Other communications networks    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    

15. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for oil and gas engineering construction?

Non-Residential Construction: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential building and engineering construction (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.

Include:

  • manufacturing plants, warehouses, office buildings, shopping centres, etc.
  • roads, bridges, sewers, electric power lines, underground cables, etc.
  • the cost of demolition of buildings, land servicing and site preparation
  • leasehold and land improvements
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • townsite facilities such as streets, sewers, stores and schools
  • buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities ( e.g. , some student and senior citizen residences) and associated expenditures on services
  • all preconstruction planning and design costs such as engineer and consulting fees and any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation, etc.
Gross capital expenditures for oil and gas engineering construction
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected Life (Years)
Oil refineries    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Natural gas processing plants    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Pipelines    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Development drilling for oil and gas    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Production facilities in oil and gas extraction    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Enhanced recovery projects    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Site development and other pre-mining costs    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Geological, geophysical and other exploration and evaluation costs    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Other oil and gas infrastructure    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    

16. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for mining construction?

Non-Residential Construction: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential building and engineering construction (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.

Include:

  • manufacturing plants, warehouses, office buildings, shopping centres, etc.
  • roads, bridges, sewers, electric power lines, underground cables, etc.
  • the cost of demolition of buildings, land servicing and site preparation
  • leasehold and land improvements
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • townsite facilities such as streets, sewers, stores and schools
  • buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities ( e.g. , some student and senior citizen residences) and associated expenditures on services
  • all preconstruction planning and design costs such as engineer and consulting fees and any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation, etc.
Gross capital expenditures for mining construction
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected Life (Years)
Mine surface buildings (except for beneficiation)    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Mine buildings for beneficiation treatment of minerals    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Mine structures    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Tailing disposal systems settling ponds    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Mine-site development    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    

17. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for oil, gas and mineral exploration and evaluation?

Non-Residential Construction: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential building and engineering construction (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.

Include:

  • manufacturing plants, warehouses, office buildings, shopping centres, etc.
  • roads, bridges, sewers, electric power lines, underground cables, etc.
  • the cost of demolition of buildings, land servicing and site preparation
  • leasehold and land improvements
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • townsite facilities such as streets, sewers, stores and schools
  • buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities ( e.g. , some student and senior citizen residences) and associated expenditures on services
  • all preconstruction planning and design costs such as engineer and consulting fees and any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation, etc.
Gross capital expenditures for oil, gas and mineral exploration and evaluation
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected Life (Years)
Exploration drilling for oil and gas    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Other oil and gas exploration    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Mineral exploration    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    

18. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for other engineering construction?

Non-Residential Construction: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential building and engineering construction (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.

Include:

  • manufacturing plants, warehouses, office buildings, shopping centres, etc.
  • roads, bridges, sewers, electric power lines, underground cables, etc.
  • the cost of demolition of buildings, land servicing and site preparation
  • leasehold and land improvements
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • townsite facilities such as streets, sewers, stores and schools
  • buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities ( e.g. , some student and senior citizen residences) and associated expenditures on services
  • all preconstruction planning and design costs such as engineer and consulting fees and any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation, etc.
Gross capital expenditures for other engineering construction
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected Life (Years)
Pollution abatement and control    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Outdoor recreational facilities    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Waste disposal facilities    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Irrigation networks    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Improved land    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Reclaimed land    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Flood protection infrastructure    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Site remediation    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Other engineering works, not elsewhere classified    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    

19. Capital Expenditures for Non-Residential Construction

Capital expenditures for non-residential construction
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000
Industrial Building  
Total New Assets  
Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  
Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration)  
Commercial Building  
Total New Assets  
Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  
Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration)  
Institutional Building  
Total New Assets  
Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  
Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration)  
Marine Engineering  
Total New Assets  
Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  
Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration)  
Transportation Engineering  
Total New Assets  
Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  
Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration)  
Waterworks Engineering  
Total New Assets  
Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  
Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration)  
Sewage Engineering  
Total New Assets  
Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  
Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration)  
Electric Power Engineering  
Total New Assets  
Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  
Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration)  
Communication Engineering  
Total New Assets  
Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  
Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration)  
Oil and Gas Engineering  
Total New Assets  
Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  
Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration)  
Mining  
Total New Assets  
Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  
Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration)  
Oil, Gas and Mineral Exploration and Evaluation  
Total New Assets  
Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  
Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration)  
Other Engineering  
Total New Assets  
Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  
Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration)  
Total  
Total New Assets  
Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  
Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration)  

 In order to reduce future follow-up, please select one of the following options.

You could also make corrections to the current cycle by pressing the Previous button.

You have not reported any capital expenditures, but did in the previous year.

  • I confirm that all values are correct.
  • I am unable to confirm that all values are correct.

The value for total capital expenditures ($######) is significantly different than the ($######) reported last reporting period.

  • I confirm that all values are correct.
  • I am unable to confirm that all values are correct.

You have not reported any capital expenditures on non-residential construction for YYYY, but did in the previous year.

  • I confirm that all values are correct.
  • I am unable to confirm that all values are correct.

Gross Capital Expenditures - Machinery and Equipment

20. For the YYYY fiscal year, did this organization have capital expenditures for machinery and equipment?

Include renovations and acquisitions to work in progress.

What are Capital Expenditures?
Capital Expenditures are the gross expenditures on fixed assets for use in the operations of your organization or for lease or rent to others.

Include:

  • cost of all new buildings, engineering, machinery and equipment which normally have a life of more than one year and are charged to fixed asset accounts
  • modifications, acquisitions and major renovations
  • capital costs such as feasibility studies, architectural, legal, installation and engineering fees
  • subsidies
  • capitalized interest charges on loans with which capital projects are financed
  • work done by own labour force
  • acquisitions to work in progress.

How to Treat Leases
Include:

  • assets acquired as a lessee through either a capital or financial lease
  • assets acquired for lease to others as an operating lease.

Exclude assets acquired for lease to others, either as a capital or financial lease.

Information for Government Departments
The following applies to government departments only:

  • include all capital expenditures without taking into account the capitalization threshold of your department
  • grants and/or subsidies to outside entities ( e.g. , municipalities, agencies, institutions or businesses) are to be excluded
  • departments are requested to exclude from reported figures budgetary items pertaining to any departmental agency and proprietary crown corporation as they are surveyed separately
  • federal departments are to report expenditures paid for by the department, regardless of which department awarded the contract
  • provincial departments are to include any capital expenditures on construction (exclude outlays for land) or machinery and equipment, for use in Canada, financed from revolving funds, loans attached to revolving funds, other loans, the Consolidated Revenue Fund or special accounts.
  • Yes
  • No

 In order to reduce future follow-up, please select one of the following options.

You have not reported any capital expenditures on machinery or equipment for YYYY, but did in the previous year.

  • I confirm that all values are correct.
  • I am unable to confirm that all values are correct.

21. For the YYYY fiscal year, which machinery and equipment assets were acquired?

Include renovations and acquisitions to work in progress.

Select all that apply.

Machinery and Equipment:
Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for machinery and equipment, whether for your own use or for lease or rent to others.

Include:

  • automobiles, trucks, professional and scientific equipment, office and store furniture and appliances
  • computers (hardware and software), broadcasting, telecommunications and other information and communication technologies equipment
  • motors, generators, transformers
  • any capitalized tooling expenses
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • progress payments paid out before delivery in the year in which such payments are made
  • any balance owing or holdbacks should be reported in the year the cost is incurred.
  • Medium and Heavy Trucks, Buses and Other Motor Vehicles
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Medium and heavy-duty trucks
    • Buses
    • Freight and utility trailers
    • Special-purpose vehicles
    • Materials handling trucks and tractors
    • Other motor vehicles
  • Passenger Cars and Light Trucks
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs
  • Other Transportation Equipment
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Locomotives, railway rolling stock, and rapid transit equipment
    • Civilian aircraft
    • Non-military ships, barges and platforms
    • Boats and personal watercraft
    • Other transportation equipment - specify:
  • Processing Equipment
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Water treatment equipment
    • Filters and strainers for fluids and fluid power systems
    • Packing, packaging, and bottling machinery
    • Mineral crushing, screening, processing and beneficiation machinery and equipment
    • Metalworking machinery
    • Industrial moulds, special dies, and patterns
    • Other industry-specific manufacturing machinery, not elsewhere classified - specify:
  • Computers and Office Equipment
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Computers and computer peripheral equipment
    • Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines (except computers and peripherals)
    • Office furniture
  • Software
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Pre-Packaged Software
    • Custom software, developed in-house/own account
    • Custom software, contracted out
  • Telecommunications, Cable and Broadcasting Equipment
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment
    • Navigational and guidance instruments
    • Telephone and data communications equipment
    • Televisions and other audio and video equipment
    • Other communication equipment - specify:
  • Commercial and Service Industry Machinery and Equipment
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Commercial cooking and food-warming equipment
    • Commercial and service industry machinery and equipment, not elsewhere classified
  • Other Industrial Machinery and Equipment
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Heavy-gauge metal containers (including intermodal)
    • Hand tools and power hand tools (except welding and soldering equipment)
    • Logging machinery and equipment
    • Rock drilling machinery and equipment
    • Other mining and quarrying machinery and equipment, not elsewhere classified
    • Oil and gas field production machinery and equipment
    • Other oil and gas field machinery and equipment (except for production)
    • Construction machinery and equipment
    • Nuclear reactor steam supply systems
    • Welding and soldering equipment
    • Industrial furnaces and ovens, and electric industrial heating equipment
    • Other materials handling equipment, conveyors, and elevators
  • Medical, Scientific and Technical Instruments and equipment
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Medical and laboratory equipment (except scientific instruments)
    • Scientific and technical instruments (except electromedical and irradiation equipment)
    • Other measuring, control, and scientific instruments (except electromedical and irradiation equipment)
    • Medical, dental and personal safety supplies
  • Other Machinery and Equipment
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Institutional and other furniture, not elsewhere classified (including furniture frames)
    • Engines (except gasoline and diesel engines for motor vehicles, and aircraft engines) and mechanical power transmission equipment
    • Pumps and compressors
    • Heating and cooling equipment (except household refrigerators and freezers)
    • Power and distribution transformers
    • Other transformers
    • Military aircraft
    • Military ships
    • Military armoured vehicles
    • Billboards
    • Non-residential mobile buildings
    • Electric motors and generators
    • Switchgear, switchboards, relays, and industrial control apparatus
    • Turbines, turbine generators, and turbine generator sets
    • Boilers, metal tanks, industrial valves and seals
    • Agricultural, lawn and garden machinery and equipment
    • Instruments for measuring electricity
    • Other machinery and equipment - specify:

22. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for medium and heavy trucks, buses and other motor vehicles?

Machinery and Equipment:
Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for machinery and equipment, whether for your own use or for lease or rent to others.

Include:

  • automobiles, trucks, professional and scientific equipment, office and store furniture and appliances
  • computers (hardware and software), broadcasting, telecommunications and other information and communication technologies equipment
  • motors, generators, transformers
  • any capitalized tooling expenses
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • progress payments paid out before delivery in the year in which such payments are made
  • any balance owing or holdbacks should be reported in the year the cost is incurred.
Gross capital expenditures for medium and heavy trucks, buses and other motor vehicles
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected Life (Years)
Medium and heavy-duty trucks    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Buses    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Freight and utility trailers    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Special-purpose vehicles    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Materials handling trucks and tractors    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Other motor vehicles    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    

23. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for passenger cars and light trucks?

Machinery and Equipment: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for machinery and equipment, whether for your own use or for lease or rent to others.

Include:

  • automobiles, trucks, professional and scientific equipment, office and store furniture and appliances
  • computers (hardware and software), broadcasting, telecommunications and other information and communication technologies equipment
  • motors, generators, transformers
  • any capitalized tooling expenses
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • progress payments paid out before delivery in the year in which such payments are made
  • any balance owing or holdbacks should be reported in the year the cost is incurred.
Gross capital expenditures for passenger cars and light trucks
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected Life (Years)
Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    

24. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for other transportation equipment?

Machinery and Equipment: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for machinery and equipment, whether for your own use or for lease or rent to others.

Include:

  • automobiles, trucks, professional and scientific equipment, office and store furniture and appliances
  • computers (hardware and software), broadcasting, telecommunications and other information and communication technologies equipment
  • motors, generators, transformers
  • any capitalized tooling expenses
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • progress payments paid out before delivery in the year in which such payments are made
  • any balance owing or holdbacks should be reported in the year the cost is incurred.
Gross capital expenditures for other transportation equipment
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected Life (Years)
Locomotives, railway rolling stock, and rapid transit equipment    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Civilian aircraft    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Non-military ships, barges and platforms    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Boats and personal watercraft    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Other transportation equipment    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    

25. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for processing equipment?

Machinery and Equipment: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for machinery and equipment, whether for your own use or for lease or rent to others.

Include:

  • automobiles, trucks, professional and scientific equipment, office and store furniture and appliances
  • computers (hardware and software), broadcasting, telecommunications and other information and communication technologies equipment
  • motors, generators, transformers
  • any capitalized tooling expenses
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • progress payments paid out before delivery in the year in which such payments are made
  • any balance owing or holdbacks should be reported in the year the cost is incurred.
Gross capital expenditures for processing equipment
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected Life (Years)
Water treatment equipment    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Filters and strainers for fluids and fluid power systems    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Packing, packaging, and bottling machinery    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Mineral crushing, screening, processing and beneficiation machinery and equipment    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Metalworking machinery    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Industrial moulds, special dies, and patterns    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Other industry-specific manufacturing machinery, not elsewhere classified    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    

26. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for computers and office equipment?

Machinery and Equipment: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for machinery and equipment, whether for your own use or for lease or rent to others.

Include:

  • automobiles, trucks, professional and scientific equipment, office and store furniture and appliances
  • computers (hardware and software), broadcasting, telecommunications and other information and communication technologies equipment
  • motors, generators, transformers
  • any capitalized tooling expenses
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • progress payments paid out before delivery in the year in which such payments are made
  • any balance owing or holdbacks should be reported in the year the cost is incurred.
Gross capital expenditures for computers and office equipment
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected Life (Years)
Computers and computer peripheral equipment    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines (except computers and peripherals)    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Office furniture    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    

27. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for software?

Machinery and Equipment: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for machinery and equipment, whether for your own use or for lease or rent to others.

Include:

  • automobiles, trucks, professional and scientific equipment, office and store furniture and appliances
  • computers (hardware and software), broadcasting, telecommunications and other information and communication technologies equipment
  • motors, generators, transformers
  • any capitalized tooling expenses
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • progress payments paid out before delivery in the year in which such payments are made
  • any balance owing or holdbacks should be reported in the year the cost is incurred.
Gross capital expenditures for software
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected Life (Years)
Pre-Packaged Software    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Custom software, developed in-house/own account    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Custom software, contracted out    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    

28. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for telecommunications, cable and broadcasting equipment?

Machinery and Equipment: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for machinery and equipment, whether for your own use or for lease or rent to others.

Include:

  • automobiles, trucks, professional and scientific equipment, office and store furniture and appliances
  • computers (hardware and software), broadcasting, telecommunications and other information and communication technologies equipment
  • motors, generators, transformers
  • any capitalized tooling expenses
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • progress payments paid out before delivery in the year in which such payments are made
  • any balance owing or holdbacks should be reported in the year the cost is incurred.
Gross capital expenditures for telecommunications, cable and broadcasting equipment
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected Life (Years)
Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Navigational and guidance instruments    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Telephone and data communications equipment    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Televisions and other audio and video equipment    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Other communication equipment    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    

29. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for commercial and service industry machinery and equipment?

Machinery and Equipment: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for machinery and equipment, whether for your own use or for lease or rent to others.

Include:

  • automobiles, trucks, professional and scientific equipment, office and store furniture and appliances
  • computers (hardware and software), broadcasting, telecommunications and other information and communication technologies equipment
  • motors, generators, transformers
  • any capitalized tooling expenses
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • progress payments paid out before delivery in the year in which such payments are made
  • any balance owing or holdbacks should be reported in the year the cost is incurred.
Gross capital expenditures for commercial and service industry machinery and equipment
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected Life (Years)
Commercial cooking and food-warming equipment    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Commercial and service industry machinery and equipment, not elsewhere classified    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    

30. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for other industrial machinery and equipment?

Machinery and Equipment: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for machinery and equipment, whether for your own use or for lease or rent to others.

Include:

  • automobiles, trucks, professional and scientific equipment, office and store furniture and appliances
  • computers (hardware and software), broadcasting, telecommunications and other information and communication technologies equipment
  • motors, generators, transformers
  • any capitalized tooling expenses
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • progress payments paid out before delivery in the year in which such payments are made
  • any balance owing or holdbacks should be reported in the year the cost is incurred.
Gross capital expenditures for other industrial machinery and equipment
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected Life (Years)
Heavy-gauge metal containers (including intermodal)    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Hand tools and power hand tools (except welding and soldering equipment)    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Logging machinery and equipment    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Rock drilling machinery and equipment    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Other mining and quarrying machinery and equipment, not elsewhere classified    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Oil and gas field production machinery and equipment    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Other oil and gas field machinery and equipment (except for production)    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Construction machinery and equipment    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Nuclear reactor steam supply systems    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Welding and soldering equipment    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Industrial furnaces and ovens, and electric industrial heating equipment    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Other materials handling equipment, conveyors, and elevators    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    

31. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for medical, scientific and technical instruments and equipment?

Machinery and Equipment: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for machinery and equipment, whether for your own use or for lease or rent to others.

Include:

  • automobiles, trucks, professional and scientific equipment, office and store furniture and appliances
  • computers (hardware and software), broadcasting, telecommunications and other information and communication technologies equipment
  • motors, generators, transformers
  • any capitalized tooling expenses
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • progress payments paid out before delivery in the year in which such payments are made
  • any balance owing or holdbacks should be reported in the year the cost is incurred.
Gross capital expenditures for medical, scientific and technical instruments and equipment
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected Life (Years)
Medical and laboratory equipment (except scientific instruments)    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Scientific and technical instruments (except electromedical and irradiation equipment)    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Other measuring, control, and scientific instruments (except electromedical and irradiation equipment)    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Medical, dental and personal safety supplies    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    

32. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for other machinery and equipment?

Machinery and Equipment: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for machinery and equipment, whether for your own use or for lease or rent to others.

Include:

  • automobiles, trucks, professional and scientific equipment, office and store furniture and appliances
  • computers (hardware and software), broadcasting, telecommunications and other information and communication technologies equipment
  • motors, generators, transformers
  • any capitalized tooling expenses
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • progress payments paid out before delivery in the year in which such payments are made
  • any balance owing or holdbacks should be reported in the year the cost is incurred.
Gross capital expenditures for other machinery and equipment
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected Life (Years)
Institutional and other furniture, not elsewhere classified (including furniture frames)    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Engines (except gasoline and diesel engines for motor vehicles, and aircraft engines) and mechanical power transmission equipment    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Pumps and compressors    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Heating and cooling equipment (except household refrigerators and freezers)    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Power and distribution transformers    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Other transformers    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Military aircraft    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Military ships    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Military armoured vehicles    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Billboards    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Non-residential mobile buildings    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Electric motors and generators    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Switchgear, switchboards, relays, and industrial control apparatus    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Turbines, turbine generators, and turbine generator sets    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Boilers, metal tanks, industrial valves and seals    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Agricultural, lawn and garden machinery and equipment    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Instruments for measuring electricity    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    
Other machinery and equipment    
New Assets    
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets    
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration    
Total    

33. Capital Expenditures for Machinery and Equipment

Capital expenditures for machinery and equipment
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000
Medium and Heavy Trucks, Buses and Other Motor Vehicles  
Total New Assets  
Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  
Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration)  
Passenger Cars and Light Trucks  
Total New Assets  
Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  
Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration)  
Other Transportation Equipment  
Total New Assets  
Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  
Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration)  
Processing Equipment  
Total New Assets  
Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  
Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration)  
Computers and Office Equipment  
Total New Assets  
Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  
Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration)  
Software  
Total New Assets  
Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  
Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration)  
Telecommunications, Cable and Broadcasting  
Total New Assets  
Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  
Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration)  
Commercial and Service Industry Machinery and Equipment  
Total New Assets  
Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  
Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration)  
Other Industrial Machinery and Equipment  
Total New Assets  
Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  
Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration)  
Medical, Scientific and Technical Instruments and equipment  
Total New Assets  
Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  
Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration)  
Other Machinery and Equipment  
Total New Assets  
Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  
Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration)  
Total  
Total New Assets  
Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  
Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration)  

 In order to reduce future follow-up, please select one of the following options.

You could also make corrections to the current cycle by pressing the Previous button.

The value for total capital expenditures ($######) is significantly different than the ($######) reported last reporting period.

  • I confirm that all values are correct.
  • I am unable to confirm that all values are correct.

You have not reported any capital expenditures on machinery or equipment for YYYY, but did in the previous year.

  • I confirm that all values are correct.
  • I am unable to confirm that all values are correct.

Non-Residential Construction and Machinery and Equipment

34. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were your organization's expenses for the following questions?

Non-Capital Repair and Maintenance Expenditures: This question represents the repair and maintenance of assets in contrast to the acquisition of assets or the renovation of assets.

Include:

  • gross non-capital repair and maintenance expenditures on non-residential buildings, other structures and on machinery and equipment
  • value of repair work done by your own employees as well as payments to persons outside your employ
  • building maintenance such as janitorial services, snow removal and sanding
  • equipment maintenance such as oil changes and lubrication of vehicles and other machinery.

Work in Progress: Work in progress represents accumulated costs since the start of capital projects which are intended to be capitalized upon completion.

Typically capital investment includes any expenditure on an asset in which its life is greater than one year. Capital items charged to operating expenses are defined as expenditures which could have been capitalized as part of the fixed assets, but for various reasons, have been charged to current expenses.

Expenses
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  Non-Residential Construction CAN$ '000 Machinery and Equipment CAN$ '000
What were this organization's non-capitalized repair and maintenance expenditures?    
What is the total dollar value of work in progress at year end?    
What were the total expenditures of a capital nature that were charged to operating expenses during the reporting period?    

 In order to reduce future follow-up, please select one of the following options.

You could also make corrections to the current cycle by pressing the Previous button.

The value reported for Capital Expenditures on Non-Residential Construction ($######) is identical to the value reported for Construction Repair and Maintenance ($######).

  • I confirm that all values are correct.
  • I am unable to confirm that all values are correct.

The value reported for Capital Expenditures on Machinery and Equipment ($######) is identical to the value reported for Repair and Maintenance of Machinery Equipment ($######).

  • I confirm that all values are correct.
  • I am unable to confirm that all values are correct.

You have reported a large value for repair and maintenance of non-residential construction for YYYY ($######).

  • I confirm that all values are correct.
  • I am unable to confirm that all values are correct.

You have reported a large value for repair and maintenance of machinery and equipment for YYYY ($######).

  • I confirm that all values are correct.
  • I am unable to confirm that all values are correct.

You have not reported any repair or maintenance expenditures of non-residential construction for YYYY, but did in the previous year.

  • I confirm that all values are correct.
  • I am unable to confirm that all values are correct.

You have not reported any repair or maintenance expenditures on machinery and equipment for YYYY, but did in the previous year.

  • I confirm that all values are correct.
  • I am unable to confirm that all values are correct.

Cost Components of Expenditures

35. What is the breakdown of expenditures by who performed the following work?

Total: These are the amounts to be divided between contractors and company's own workers.

Value of Work Performed by Contractors: Work performed by contractors are contract billings or equivalent including holdbacks.

Value of Own Account Work: In addition to own account work, include all materials and supplies provided free to contractors and all architects, engineering and consultants fees and similar services.

Expenditures by who performed the work
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000
New non-residential construction including renovation and retrofit  
Total reported in summary 1:  
Value of work performed by contractor (external work)  
Value of own-account work (internal work)  
Total work (external work and internal work)  
New machinery and equipment including renovation and retrofit  
Total reported in summary 2:  
Value of work performed by contractor (external work)  
Value of own-account work (internal work)  
Total work (external work and internal work)  
Non-capitalized construction repair and maintenance expenses  
Expense reported in question 34:  
Value of work performed by contractor (external work)  
Value of own-account work (internal work)  
Total work (external work and internal work)  
Non-capitalized Machinery and equipment repair and maintenance expenses  
Expense reported in question 34:  
Value of work performed by contractor (external work)  
Value of own-account work (internal work)  
Total work (external work and internal work)  

36. What is the breakdown of expenditures on own account work (internal work) by the following categories of costs?

Salaries and Wages: Show the total value of salaries and wages paid to your employees. Salaries and wages are gross earnings before deductions such as income tax and include incentive bonuses and vacation pay but exclude fringe benefits.

Materials and Supplies: Report total cost of materials and supplies used by your own employees and those provided free to contractors relating to the expenditures reported.

Other Charges: Examples of other charges are insurance, power, telephone and also architectural, legal, and engineering fees considered to be applicable to the expenditures reported.

Expenditures on own account work (internal work)
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000
New non-residential construction including renovation and retrofit  
Value of own account work reported in question 35:  
Salaries and Wages  
Materials and Supplies  
Other Charges  
Total - Value of Own account work  
New machinery and equipment including renovation and retrofit  
Value of own account work reported in question 35:  
Salaries and Wages  
Materials and Supplies  
Other Charges  
Total - Value of Own account work  
Non-capitalized construction repair and maintenance expenses  
Value of own account work reported in question 35:  
Salaries and Wages  
Materials and Supplies  
Other Charges  
Total - Value of Own account work  
Non-capitalized Machinery and equipment repair and maintenance expenses  
Value of own account work reported in question 35:  
Salaries and Wages  
Materials and Supplies  
Other Charges  
Total - Value of Own account work  

Disposals and Sales of Fixed Assets

Selling Price: The total value, or the sales of fixed assets which were disposed of or sold, even if traded in for credit in the acquisition or purchase of new fixed assets. When land and buildings are sold together, please report the selling price of the land separately, along with other land sales.

Gross Book Value: This value should represent total capital expenditures for an asset, at and since the time of original construction or purchase, including all subsequent capital expenditures for the purpose of modernization, expansion, etc. Any subsidies received should not be subtracted.

Age: Report the age of the fixed asset at the time of disposal. If you have disposed of or sold similar assets of varying ages, report them separately or combine the data and provide a weighted average for the ages.

37. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the organization's disposed land and residential construction?

Selling price, gross book value and age of the organization's disposed land and residential construction
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Land    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Residential construction    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    

38. For the YYYY fiscal year, did this organization dispose or sell any other fixed assets (non-residential construction or machinery and equipment)?

  • Yes
  • No

39. For the YYYY fiscal year, which assets were disposed of or sold?

Select all that apply.

  • Industrial Building
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Manufacturing plants
    • Industrial depots and service buildings
    • Farm buildings and structures
    • Other industrial sites and structures - specify:
  • Commercial Building
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Industrial laboratories, research and development centres
    • Warehouses
    • Service stations
    • Office buildings
    • Hotels
    • Restaurants
    • Shopping centres, plazas, malls and stores
    • Theatres and halls
    • Indoor recreational facilities
    • Other collective dwellings
    • Student residences
    • Airports and other passenger terminals
    • Communications buildings
    • Sports facilities with spectator capacity
    • Other commercial properties, not elsewhere classified - specify:
  • Institutional Building
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Schools, colleges, universities and other educational buildings
    • Religious centres and memorial sites
    • Hospitals
    • Nursing homes, homes for the aged
    • Health centres, clinics and other health care buildings
    • Daycare centres
    • Libraries
    • Historical sites
    • Museums
    • Public security facilities
    • Other institutional properties - specify:
  • Marine Engineering
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Seaports
    • Canals and waterways
    • Marinas and harbours
    • Other marine infrastructure - specify:
  • Transportation Engineering
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Parking lots and garages
    • Highway and road structures and networks
    • Runways (include lighting)
    • Railway lines
    • Bridges
    • Tunnels
    • Other land transportation infrastructure, not elsewhere classified - specify:
  • Waterworks Engineering
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Water filtration plants
    • Water supply infrastructure - specify:
  • Sewage Engineering
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Sewage treatment plants
    • Sewage treatment infrastructure - specify:
  • Electric Power Engineering
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Steam production plants
    • Nuclear production plants
    • Hydro-electric power plants
    • Power transmission networks
    • Power distribution networks
    • Other Power generating plants - specify:
  • Communication Engineering
  • Select all assets that apply:
    • Telecommunications transmission cables and lines (except optical fibre)
      e.g., aerial, underground and submarine
    • Telecommunications transmission optical fibre cables
      e.g., aerial, underground and submarine
    • Telecommunications transmission support structures - towers, poles, conduit
    • Other communications networks - specify:
  • Oil and Gas Engineering
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Oil refineries
    • Natural gas processing plants
    • Pipelines
    • Development drilling for oil and gas
    • Production facilities in oil and gas extraction
    • Enhanced recovery projects
    • Site development and other pre-mining costs
    • Geological, geophysical and other exploration and evaluation costs
    • Other oil and gas engineering - specify:
  • Mining
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Mine surface buildings (except for beneficiation)
    • Mine buildings for beneficiation treatment of minerals
    • Mine structures
    • Tailing disposal systems, settling ponds
    • Mine-site development
  • Oil, Gas and Mineral Exploration and Evaluation
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Exploration drilling for oil and gas
    • Other oil and gas exploration
    • Mineral exploration
  • Other Engineering
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Pollution abatement and control
    • Outdoor recreational facilities
    • Waste disposal facilities
    • Irrigation networks
    • Improved land
    • Reclaimed land
    • Flood protection infrastructure
    • Site remediation
    • Other engineering works, not elsewhere classified - specify:
  • Medium and Heavy Trucks, Buses and Other Motor Vehicles
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Medium and heavy-duty trucks
    • Buses
    • Freight and utility trailers
    • Special-purpose vehicles
    • Materials handling trucks and tractors
    • Other motor vehicles
  • Passenger Cars and Light Trucks
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs
  • Other Transportation Equipment
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Locomotives, railway rolling stock, and rapid transit equipment
    • Civilian aircraft
    • Non-military ships, barges and platforms
    • Boats and personal watercraft
    • Other transportation equipment - specify:
  • Processing Equipment
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Water treatment equipment
    • Filters and strainers for fluids and fluid power systems
    • Packing, packaging, and bottling machinery
    • Mineral crushing, screening, processing and beneficiation machinery and equipment
    • Metalworking machinery
    • Industrial moulds, special dies, and patterns
    • Other industry-specific manufacturing machinery, not elsewhere classified - specify:
  • Computers and Office Equipment
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Computers and computer peripheral equipment
    • Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines (except computers and peripherals)
    • Office furniture
  • Software
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Pre-Packaged Software
    • Custom software, developed in-house/own account
    • Custom software, contracted out
  • Telecommunications, Cable and Broadcasting Equipment
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment
    • Navigational and guidance instruments
    • Telephone and data communications equipment
    • Televisions and other audio and video equipment
    • Other communication equipment - specify:
  • Commercial and Service Industry Machinery and Equipment
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Commercial cooking and food-warming equipment
    • Commercial and service industry machinery and equipment, not elsewhere classified
  • Other Industrial Machinery and Equipment
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Heavy-gauge metal containers (including intermodal)
    • Hand tools and power hand tools (except welding and soldering equipment)
    • Logging machinery and equipment
    • Rock drilling machinery and equipment
    • Other mining and quarrying machinery and equipment, not elsewhere classified
    • Oil and gas field production machinery and equipment
    • Other oil and gas field machinery and equipment (except for production)
    • Construction machinery and equipment
    • Nuclear reactor steam supply systems
    • Welding and soldering equipment
    • Industrial furnaces and ovens, and electric industrial heating equipment
    • Other materials handling equipment, conveyors, and elevators
  • Medical, Scientific and Technical Instruments and equipment
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Medical and laboratory equipment (except scientific instruments)
    • Scientific and technical instruments (except electromedical and irradiation equipment)
    • Other measuring, control, and scientific instruments (except electromedical and irradiation equipment)
    • Medical, dental and personal safety supplies
  • Other Machinery and Equipment
    Select all assets that apply:
    • Institutional and other furniture, not elsewhere classified (including furniture frames)
    • Engines (except gasoline and diesel engines for motor vehicles, and aircraft engines) and mechanical power transmission equipment
    • Pumps and compressors
    • Heating and cooling equipment (except household refrigerators and freezers)
    • Power and distribution transformers
    • Other transformers
    • Military aircraft
    • Military ships
    • Military armoured vehicles
    • Billboards
    • Non-residential mobile buildings
    • Waste and scrap of iron and steel
    • Waste and scrap of aluminum and aluminum alloy
    • Waste and scrap of other non-ferrous metals
    • Electric motors and generators
    • Switchgear, switchboards, relays, and industrial control apparatus
    • Turbines, turbine generators, and turbine generator sets
    • Boilers, metal tanks, industrial valves and seals
    • Agricultural, lawn and garden machinery and equipment
    • Instruments for measuring electricity
    • Other machinery and equipment - specify:

40. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for industrial building construction?

Selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for industrial building construction
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Manufacturing plants    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Industrial depots and service buildings    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Farm buildings and structures    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Other industrial sites and structures    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    

41. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for commercial building construction?

Selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for commercial building construction
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Industrial laboratories, research and development centres    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Warehouses    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Service stations    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Office buildings    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Hotels    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Restaurants    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Shopping centres, plazas, malls and stores    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Theatres and halls    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Indoor recreational facilities    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Other collective dwellings    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Student residences    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Airports and other passenger terminals    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Communications buildings    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Sports facilities with spectator capacity    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Other commercial properties, not elsewhere classified    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    

42. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for institutional building construction?

Selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for institutional building construction
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Schools, colleges, universities and other educational buildings    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Religious centres and memorial sites    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Hospitals    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Nursing homes, homes for the aged    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Health centres, clinics and other health care building    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Daycare centres    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Libraries    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Historical sites    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Museums    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Public security facilities    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Other institutional properties    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    

43. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for marine engineering construction?

Selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for marine engineering construction
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Seaports    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Canals and waterways    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Marinas and harbours    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Other marine infrastructure    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    

44. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for transportation engineering construction?

Selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for transportation engineering construction
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Parking lots and garages    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Highway and road structures and networks    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Runways (include lighting)    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Railway lines    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Bridges    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Tunnels    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Other land transportation infrastructure, not elsewhere classified    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    

45. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for waterworks engineering construction?

Selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for waterworks engineering construction
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Water filtration plants    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Water supply infrastructure    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    

46. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for sewage engineering construction?

Selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for sewage engineering construction
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Sewage treatment plants    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Sewage treatment infrastructure    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    

47. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for electric power engineering construction?

Selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for electric power engineering construction
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Steam production plants    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Nuclear production plants    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Hydro-electric power plants    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Power transmission networks    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Power distribution networks    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Other Power generating plants    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    

48. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for communication engineering construction?

Selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for communication engineering construction
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Telecommunications transmission cables and lines (except optical fibre) - (e.g., aerial, underground and submarine)    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Telecommunications transmission optical fibre cables (e.g., aerial, underground and submarine)    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Telecommunications transmission support structures - towers, poles, conduit    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Other communications networks    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    

49. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for oil and gas engineering construction?

Selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for oil and gas engineering construction
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Oil refineries    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Natural gas processing plants    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Pipelines    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Development drilling for oil and gas    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Production facilities in oil and gas extraction    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Enhanced recovery projects    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Site development and other pre-mining costs    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Geological, geophysical and other exploration and evaluation costs    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Other oil and gas engineering    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    

50. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for mining construction?

Selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for mining construction
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Mine surface buildings (except for beneficiation)    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Mine buildings for beneficiation treatment of minerals    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Mine structures    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Tailing disposal systems settling ponds    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Mine-site development    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    

51. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for oil, gas and mineral exploration and evaluation?

Selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for oil, gas and mineral exploration and evaluation
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Exploration drilling for oil and gas    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Other oil and gas exploration    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Mineral exploration    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    

52. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for other engineering construction?

Selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for other engineering construction
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Pollution abatement and control    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Outdoor recreational facilities    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Waste disposal facilities    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Irrigation networks    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Improved land    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Reclaimed land    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Flood protection infrastructure    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Site remediation    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Other engineering works, not elsewhere classified    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    

53. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for medium and heavy trucks, buses and other motor vehicles?

Selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for medium and heavy trucks, buses and other motor vehicles
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Medium and heavy-duty trucks    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Buses    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Freight and utility trailers    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Special-purpose vehicles    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Materials handling trucks and tractors    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Other motor vehicles    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    

54. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for passenger cars and light trucks?

Selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for passenger cars and light trucks
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    

55. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for other transportation equipment?

Selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for other transportation equipment
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Locomotives, railway rolling stock, and rapid transit equipment    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Civilian aircraft    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Non-military ships, barges and platforms    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Boats and personal watercraft    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Other transportation equipment    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    

56. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for processing equipment?

Selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for processing equipment
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Water treatment equipment    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Filters and strainers for fluids and fluid power systems    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Packing, packaging, and bottling machinery    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Mineral crushing, screening, processing and beneficiation machinery and equipment    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Metalworking machinery    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Industrial moulds, special dies, and patterns    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Other industry-specific manufacturing machinery, not elsewhere classified    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    

57. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for computers and office equipment?

Selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for computers and office equipment
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Computers and computer peripheral equipment    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines (except computers and peripherals)    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Office furniture    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    

58. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for software?

Selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for software
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Pre-Packaged Software    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Custom software, developed in-house/own account    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Custom software, contracted out    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    

59. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for telecommunications, cable and broadcasting equipment?

Selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for telecommunications, cable and broadcasting equipment
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Navigational and guidance instruments    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Telephone and data communications equipment    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Televisions and other audio and video equipment    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Other communication equipment    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    

60. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for commercial and service industry machinery and equipment?

Selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for commercial and service industry machinery and equipment
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Commercial cooking and food-warming equipment    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Commercial and service industry machinery and equipment, not elsewhere classified    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    

61. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for other industrial machinery and equipment?

Selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for other industrial machinery and equipment
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Heavy-gauge metal containers (including intermodal)    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Hand tools and power hand tools (except welding and soldering equipment)    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Logging machinery and equipment    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Rock drilling machinery and equipment    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Other mining and quarrying machinery and equipment, not elsewhere classified    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Oil and gas field production machinery and equipment    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Other oil and gas field machinery and equipment (except for production)    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Construction machinery and equipment    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Nuclear reactor steam supply systems    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Welding and soldering equipment    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Industrial furnaces and ovens, and electric industrial heating equipment    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Other materials handling equipment, conveyors, and elevators    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    

62. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for medical, scientific and technical instruments and equipment?

Selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for medical, scientific and technical instruments and equipment
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Medical and laboratory equipment (except scientific instruments)    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Scientific and technical instruments (except electromedical and irradiation equipment)    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Other measuring, control, and scientific instruments (except electromedical and irradiation equipment)    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Medical, dental and personal safety supplies    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    

63. For the YYYY fiscal year, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for other machinery and equipment?

Selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for other machinery and equipment
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Institutional and other furniture, not elsewhere classified (including furniture frames)    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Engines (except gasoline and diesel engines for motor vehicles, and aircraft engines) and mechanical power transmission equipment    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Pumps and compressors    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Heating and cooling equipment (except household refrigerators and freezers)    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Power and distribution transformers    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Other transformers    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Military aircraft    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Military ships    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Military armoured vehicles    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Billboards    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Non-residential mobile buildings    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Waste and scrap of iron and steel    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Waste and scrap of aluminum and aluminum alloy    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Waste and scrap of other non-ferrous metals    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Electric motors and generators    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Switchgear, switchboards, relays, and industrial control apparatus    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Turbines, turbine generators, and turbine generator sets    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Boilers, metal tanks, industrial valves and seals    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Agricultural, lawn and garden machinery and equipment    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Instruments for measuring electricity    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    
Other machinery and equipment    
Selling Price    
Gross Book Value    
Age    

Changes and events that affected the business or organization

64. Indicate any changes or events that affected the reported values for this business or organization, compared with the last reporting period.

Select all that apply.

  • Strike or lock-out
  • Exchange rate impact
  • Price changes in goods or services sold
  • Contracting out
  • Organisational change
  • Price changes in labour or raw materials
  • Natural disaster
  • Recession
  • Change in product line
  • Sold business units
  • Expansion
  • New/lost contract
  • Plant closures
  • Acquisition of business units
  • Other changes or events — specify:
  • No changes or events

Contact person

65. Statistics Canada may need to contact the person who completed this questionnaire for further information.Is [Provided Given Name] [Provided Family Name] the best person to contact?

  • Yes
  • No

Who is the best person to contact about this questionnaire?

  • First name
  • Last name
  • Title
  • Email address
  • Telephone number (including area code)
  • Extension number (if applicable)
  • Fax number (including area code)

Feedback

66. How long did it take to complete this questionnaire?

Include the time spent gathering the necessary information.

  • Hours
  • Minutes

67. We invite your comments about this questionnaire.

Federal Science Expenditures and Personnel (FSEP) 2018/2019 – Activities in the social sciences, humanities and the arts

Information for respondents

Authority to publish

I hereby authorize Statistics Canada to disclose any or all portions of the data supplied on this questionnaire that could identify this department after the tabling of the forecast year Main Estimates.

  1. Yes
  2. No

Respondent Information:

  1. Name of person authorized to sign
  2. Signature
  3. Official position
  4. Program
  5. Department or agency
  6. E-mail address
  7. Telephone number

Enquiries to be directed to:

  1. Name
  2. Date
  3. Position title
  4. Telephone number
  5. Email address
  6. Fax number

Purpose

This survey collects financial and operating data on expenditures and full-time equivalent personnel on the scientific activities of Federal Government Public Administration in Canada.

Additional information

The data collected are used by federal and provincial science policy analysts, and are also part of the gross domestic expenditures on research and development (GERD). Your information may also be used by Statistics Canada for other statistical and research purposes.

Authority

Collected under the authority of the Statistics Act, Revised Statutes of Canada, 1985, Chapter S-19.

Completion of this questionnaire is a legal requirement under this Act.

Confidentiality

Statistics Canada is prohibited by law from releasing any information it collects which could identify any person, business, or organization, unless consent has been given by the respondent or as permitted by the Statistics Act. Statistics Canada will use the information from this survey for statistical purposes.

Data-sharing agreements

To reduce respondent burden, Statistics Canada has entered into data-sharing agreements with provincial and territorial statistical agencies and other government organizations, which have agreed to keep the data confidential and use them only for statistical purposes. Statistics Canada will only share data from this survey with those organizations that have demonstrated a requirement to use the data.

Section 11 of the Statistics Act provides for the sharing of information with provincial and territorial statistical agencies that meet certain conditions. These agencies must have the legislative authority to collect the same information, on a mandatory basis, and the legislation must provide substantially the same provisions for confidentiality and penalties for disclosure of confidential information as the Statistics Act. Because these agencies have the legal authority to compel businesses to provide the same information, consent is not requested and businesses may not object to the sharing of the data.

For this survey, there are Section 11 agreements with the provincial and territorial statistical agencies of Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Quebec, Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, British Columbia, and the Yukon.

The shared data will be limited to information pertaining to federal departments and agencies located within the jurisdiction of the respective province or territory.

Section 12 of the Statistics Act provides for the sharing of information with federal, provincial or territorial government organizations. Under Section 12, you may refuse to share your information with any of these organizations by writing a letter of objection to the Chief Statistician and returning it with the completed questionnaire. Please specify the organizations with which you do not want to share your data.

For this survey, there are Section 12 agreements with the statistical agencies of Prince Edward Island, the Northwest Territories, Nunavut and Industry Canada.

The shared data will be limited to information pertaining to federal departments and agencies located within the jurisdiction of the respective province or territory.

Record linkage

To enhance the data from this survey and to minimize the reporting burden, Statistics Canada may combine it with information from other surveys or from administrative sources.

Security of emails and faxes

Statistics Canada advises you that there could be a risk of disclosure during the transmission of information by facsimile or e-mail. However, upon receipt, Statistics Canada will provide the guaranteed level of protection afforded all information collected under the authority of the Statistics Act.

Return procedures

Please forward the completed questionnaire and listing of extramural performers through the Electronic File Transfer service (EFT).

For further inquiries:

Thank you for your co-operation.

FSEP - Introduction

This introduction is intended to provide an overview of the process of collecting science expenditure data; definitions of and explanatory notes on natural sciences and engineering, social sciences, humanities and the arts, scientific and technological activities, performance sectors, and other terms used are given in subsequent sections.

The collection of science expenditure data is organized by the Investment, Science and Technology Division (ISTD) of Statistics Canada. This exercise was formerly conducted under the aegis of the Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat but is now solely a Statistics Canada survey.

Collection is undertaken to gather essential data describing the recent, current and proposed state of the federal resources allocated to science. Federal science expenditures data are provided to Industry Canada who in turn use the data in the development of advice to the Assistant Deputy Ministers' Steering Committee on the Management of S&T, their Minister and the Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat, as well as in policy development and in monitoring the implementation of science policies. Statistics Canada maintains historical expenditure series in natural sciences and engineering dating back to 1963 and to 1971 in the social sciences, humanities and the arts. These data are available through the Investment, Science and Technology Division (ISTD) or through special requests.

The basic reporting unit is the budgetary program of a department or agency. Each budgetary program forms the subject of separate scientific expenditure reports for the natural and for the social science activities within it. Both the program and the program activities within it may be scientific in whole or in part only. Only expenditures on the scientific components of a program or its activity are reported. In some programs it will be difficult to distinguish between the natural and social sciences. However, some allocation must be made and in determining this allocation, the dominant orientation of the projects and the area of expertise of the personnel involved must be considered. Detailed definitions are given on the following pages.

On the questionnaires, the identified expenditures are looked at from several different viewpoints and in various subdivisions. Expenditures on research and development (R&D) and related scientific activities (RSA) are subdivided to provide an indication of the "what" of a department's scientific effort. Expenditures in each category of scientific activity are further subdivided into "current" and "capital" segments. Current expenditures are additionally subdivided by sector, to indicate the "where" and "by whom" the activity is performed (e.g., in business enterprise, in higher education).

The human resources allocated to scientific activities are summarized in terms of the involved categories of personnel (scientific and professional, technical, etc.) and the principal focus of their efforts (R&D, RSA and, administration of extramural programs).

When completed, checked for consistency with previous reports, entered into the database and totaled along the various dimensions, these data provide snapshots of the federal resources allocated to science, supporting not only the work of central agencies but also the submissions of departments and agencies requesting resources.

Purpose

This survey collects financial and operating data on expenditures and full-time equivalent personnel on the scientific activities of Federal Government Public Administration in Canada.

Question 1: Expenditures by activity and performer

General

The social sciences, humanities and the arts consist of disciplines involving the study of human actions and conditions and the social, economic and institutional mechanisms affecting humans. Included are such disciplines as arts, economics and business, education, history and archaeology, law, language and linguistics, media and communications, philosophy, ethics and religion, psychology and cognitive sciences, social and economic geography, and sociology.

Expenditures by activity and performer

Scientific and technological (S&T) activities can be defined as all systematic activities which are closely concerned with the generation, advancement, dissemination and application of scientific and technology knowledge in all fields of science and technology, that is the natural sciences and engineering, and the social sciences, humanities and the arts.

The central activity is scientific research and experimental development (R&D). In addition there are a number of activities closely related to R&D, and are termed related scientific activities (RSA). Those identified as being appropriate for the federal government in the social sciences, humanities and the arts are: general purpose data collection, information services, special services and studies and education support.

The performer is equivalent to the sector in which the scientific activity is conducted. The basic distinction is between intramural and extramural performance. Extramural payments are classified on the basis of the performance sectors to which they are made. The appropriate extramural performers are business enterprise, higher education, Canadian non-profit institutions, foreign performers, provincial and municipal governments, and other performers.

I. Performers

lntramural activities include all current expenditures incurred for scientific activities carried out by in-house personnel of units assigned to the program; the related gross fixed capital expenditures (acquisition of land, buildings, machinery and equipment for scientific activities); the administration of scientific activities by program employees; and, the purchase of goods and services to support in-house scientific activities (include royalties or licences for the use of patents and other intellectual property rights, the lease of capital goods (machinery and equipment, etc.) and the rental of buildings to support scientific activities performed by the statistical unit in the reference year).

The intramural expenditures reported for scientific activities are those direct costs, including salaries, associated with scientific programs. The costs should include that portion of a program's contribution to employee benefit plans (e.g., superannuation and compensation) which is applicable to the scientific personnel within the program. The summation of intramural R&D activity is synonymous with the performance of R&D for the entire economy (GERD).

Extramural performers are groups being funded by the federal government sector for S&T activities. In this survey the extramural performers include:

  • Business enterprise – business and government enterprises including public utilities and government-owned firms. Both financial and non-financial corporations are included. Incorporated consultants or unincorporated individuals providing scientific and engineering services are also included. Industrial research institutes located at Canadian universities are considered to be in the higher education sector.
  • Higher education – comprises all universities, colleges of technology and other institutes of post-secondary education, whatever their source of finance or legal status. It also includes teaching hospitals (non-teaching hospitals are in the Canadian non-profit sector) all research institutes, centers, experimental stations and clinics that have their scientific activities under the direct control of, or administered by, or associated with, the higher education establishments.
  • Canadian non-profit institutions – charitable foundations, voluntary health organizations, scientific and professional societies, non-teaching hospitals (teaching hospitals are in the higher education sector) and other organizations not established to earn profits. Non-profit institutions primarily serving or controlled by another sector should be included in the controlling sector.
  • Provincial and municipal governments – departments and agencies of these governments as well as provincial research organizations. Government enterprises, such as provincial utilities are included in the business enterprise sector, and non-teaching hospitals in the Canadian non-profit institutions sector.
  • Foreign performers – all foreign government agencies, foreign companies (including foreign subsidiaries of Canadian firms), international organizations, non-resident foreign nationals and Canadians studying or teaching abroad.

II. Research and experimental development (R&D)

Research and experimental development - comprise creative and systematic work undertaken in order to increase the stock of knowledge - including knowledge of humankind, culture and society - and to devise new applications of available knowledge.

R&D activities may be aimed at achieving either specific or general objectives. R&D is always aimed at new findings, based on original concepts (and their interpretation) or hypotheses. It is largely uncertain about its final outcome (or at least about the quantity of time and resources needed to achieve it), it is planned for and budgeted (even when carried out by individuals), and it is aimed at producing results that could be either freely transferred or traded in a marketplace.

For an activity to be an R&D activity, it must satisfy five core criteria:

  1. To be aimed at new findings (novel);
  2. To be based on original, not obvious, concepts and hypothesis (creative);
  3. To be uncertain about the final outcome (uncertainty);
  4. To be planned and budgeted (systematic);
  5. To lead to results that could be possibly reproduced (transferable/or reproducible).

Examples of R&D:

  1. A review of theories on the factors determining regional disparities in economic growth.
  2. Understanding the fundamental dynamics of spatial interactions.
  3. Comparative evaluations of national education programs aimed at reducing the learning gap experienced by disadvantaged communities.
  4. Research studies analyzing the spatial-temporal patterns in the transmission and diffusion of an infectious disease outbreak.

Both "research" and "development" are often used with different meanings in the government. For example, it is increasingly common to hear that a person is "researching" something (i.e. the person is looking for information about something). Similarly, there are many units with either "research" or "development" or both terms in their titles which are concerned primarily with information gathering, speech writing, and preparation of position papers. These should be excluded from the scientific activity of R&D. On the other hand, a case study on unemployment in a specific region, if applying original techniques in interviewing survey respondents could include such data collection in its R&D effort. From a broad perspective, to the extent that the social sciences are using empirical data, the same guidelines have to be applied as for the natural sciences (although excluding the testing of their results on an experimental basis).

Many social scientists perform work in which they bring the established methodologies and facts of the social sciences to bear upon a particular problem, but which cannot be classified as research. The following are examples of work which might be included in this category and are not R&D: interpretative commentary on the probable economic effects of a change in the tax structure using existing economic data; forecasting future changes in the pattern of the demand for social services within a given area arising from an altered demographic structure; operations research as a contribution to decision-making, e.g. planning the optimal distribution system for a factory; the use of standard techniques in applied psychology to select and classify industrial and military personnel, students, etc., and to test children with reading or other disabilities.

1. In-house R&D – R&D performed by personnel of the reporting program. It may include R&D carried out on behalf of another program or federal government department.

2. R&D contracts – R&D contracts to an outside institution or individual to fund R&D performed by the institution or individual. The criterion is: would the performer report the R&D contract as in-house (intramural) R&D that is government-funded? If the answer is yes the activity would be an R&D contract. If no, and the funding is to provide goods and services necessary to support the in-house R&D of the federal government it should be reported as In-house R&D.

3. R&D grants and contributions – awards to organizations or individuals for the conduct of R&D and intended to benefit the recipients rather than provide the program with goods, services or information. These funds are normally identical to that portion of the budgetary "grants and contributions" line object of expenditure which is devoted to R&D activities.

4. Research fellowships – awards to individuals for advanced research training and experience. Awards intended primarily to support the education of the recipients should be reported as "education support".

5. Administration of extramural programs – the costs of identifiable units engaged in the administration of contracts and grants and contributions for scientific activities that are to be performed outside the federal government. These expenditures should be broken down by the type of scientific activity supported, i.e. R&D or RSA.

6. Capital expenditures – the annual gross amount paid for the acquisition of fixed assets that are used repeatedly or continuously in the performance of scientific activities for more than one year. They should be reported in full for the period when they took place, whether acquired or developed in house, and should not be registered as an element of depreciation.

The most relevant types of assets used for capital expenditures are:

  • Land and buildings
  • Machinery and equipment
  • Capitalized computer software
  • Other intellectual property products

III. Related scientific activities (RSA)

Related scientific activities (RSA) are all systematic activities which are closely concerned with the generation, advancement, dissemination and application of scientific and technological knowledge. The types of related scientific activities for the social sciences, humanities and the arts are described below.

7. In-house RSA – RSA performed by personnel of the reporting program. It may include RSA carried out on behalf of another program or federal government department.

In-house RSA activities include all current expenditures incurred for scientific activities carried out by in-house personnel of units assigned to the program; the purchase of goods and services to support in-house scientific activities (include royalties or licences for the use of patents and other intellectual property rights, and the rental of buildings to support scientific activities performed by the statistical unit in the reference year). Also include expenses of persons who provide ancillary services such as security, cleaning and maintenance work, finance and administration that are proportional to the RSA being conducted. However, the personnel providing these services are not to be included in the in-house personnel counts (see Section 2. Personnel).

The intramural expenditures reported to RSA are those direct costs, including salaries, associated with scientific programs. The cost should include that portion of a program's contribution to employee benefit plans (e.g., superannuation and compensation) which is applicable to the scientific personnel within the program. Also include the costs of self-employed individuals, consultants and researchers who are working on-site on the departments' RSA projects.

8. RSA contracts – contracts to an outside institution or individual to fund RSA performed by the institution or individual. The criterion is: would the performer report the RSA contract as in-house (intramural) RSA that is government-funded? If the answer is yes the activity would be an RSA contract. If no, and the funding is for the purchase goods and services to support the in-house RSA of the federal government department, it should be reported as In-house RSA (Item 7).

Contracts to other federal government departments should be reported as a transfer of funds in question 3A (i) and 3A (ii) of the questionnaire.

9. RSA grants and contributions – awards to organizations or individuals for the conduct of RSA and intended to benefit the recipients rather than provide the program with goods, services or information. These funds are normally identical to that portion of the budgetary "grants and contributions" line object of expenditure which is devoted to RSA.

In-house RSA, RSA Contracts and RSA grants and contributions can include the following items:

  • General purpose data collection – the routine gathering, processing, collating and analyzing and publication of information on human phenomena using survey, regular and special investigations and compilations of existing records. It excludes data collected primarily for internal administrative purpose (e.g. departmental personnel statistics) as well as the collection of data as part of an R&D project.

    Data collected as part of an existing or proposed research project are charged to research. Similarly, the costs of analyzing existing data as part of a research project are R&D costs, even when the data were originally collected for some other purpose. The institution involved are generally the statistical bureaus of Canadian governments and the statistical sections of departments and agencies. If there are units whose principal activity is R&D, their costs and personnel should be assigned to R&D; specialized libraries with separate budgets should be assigned to information services.

  • Information services – all work directed to collecting, coding, analyzing, evaluating, recording, classifying, translating and disseminating scientific and technological information as well as museum services. Included are the operations of scientific and technical libraries, S&T consulting and advisory services, the Patent Office, the publication of scientific journals and monographs, and the organizing of scientific conferences. Grants for the publication of scholarly works are also included.

    General purpose information services or information services directed primarily towards the general public are excluded, as are general departmental and public libraries. When individual budgets exist, the costs of libraries which belong to institutions otherwise entirely classified to another activity, such as R&D, should be assigned to information services. The costs of printing and distributing reports from another activity, such as R&D, are normally attributed to that activity.

  • Sub category under Information services:
  • Museum services – the collecting, cataloguing and displaying of specimens and representations relating to human history, social organization and creations. The activity involves a systematic attempt to preserve and display the works of human beings and to provide information on their works, history, and nature. The scientific activities of historical museums, archeological displays, and art galleries are included. In all cases the costs of providing entertainment and recreation to visitors should be excluded (e.g. restaurants, children's gardens and museums).

    When a museum also covers aspects of natural history, the museum's operations should be divided between the social and natural sciences. However, museums of science and technology, war, etc., which display synthetic or artificial objects and may also illustrate the operations of certain technologies, should be considered as engaged in museum services in social sciences.

  • Special services and studies - systematic investigations carried out in order to provide information needed for planning or policy formulation. Demonstration projects are also included.

    The work is usually carried out by specialized units in some government departments, by consultants, by royal commissions, and by task forces. The activity is similar to R&D since it may require innovative analyses and a high degree of scientific ability. However, such studies are not intended to acquire new knowledge but to provide specific answers to specific problems (generally immediate, localized and perhaps temporary). The day-to-day operations of units concerned with departmental planning, organization or management are not normally included (i.e. administrative records kept by departments of education) but special projects may be relevant.

  • Sub categories under Special services and studies include:
  • Economic and feasibility studies – the investigation of the socio-economic characteristics and implications of specific situations (e.g. a study of the variability of a petrochemical complex in a certain region). Note that feasibility studies on research projects are part of R&D.
  • Operations and policy-related studies – covers a range of activities, such as the analysis and assessment of the existing programs, policies and operations of government departments and other institutions; the work of units concerned with the continuing analysis and monitoring of external phenomena (e.g. defence and security analysis); and the work of legislative commissions of inquiry concerned with general government or departmental policy or operations.

    Any activity aimed at providing close support to policy actions, as well as to legislative activity, should be included as a related scientific activity (RSA). This includes policy advice and relations with the media, legal advice, public relations or even technical support for the administrative activity (e.g. accounting).

    Research activities aimed at providing the decision makers with a thorough knowledge of social, economic or natural phenomena have to be included in R&D. These R&D activities are usually performed by skilled personnel - researchers - in small teams of experts and consultants and meet the standard academic criteria for scientific work (in addition to the R&D criteria).

  • Education support – grants to individuals or institutions on behalf of individuals which are intended to support the post-secondary education of students in technology and the social sciences. General purpose grants to educational institutions are excluded. The activity includes the support of foreign students in their studies of the social sciences at Canadian or foreign institutions. Grants intended primarily to support the research of individuals at universities are either R&D grants or research fellowships.

10. Administration of extramural programs – the costs of identifiable units engaged in the administration of contracts and grants and contributions for scientific activities that are to be performed outside the federal government. These expenditures should be broken down by the type of scientific activity supported, i.e. R&D or RSA.

11. Capital expenditures – the annual gross amount paid for the acquisition of fixed assets that are used repeatedly or continuously in the performance of scientific activities for more than one year. They should be reported in full for the period when they took place, whether acquired or developed in house, and should not be registered as an element of depreciation.

The most relevant types of assets used for capital expenditures are:

  • Land and buildings
  • Machinery and equipment
  • Capitalized computer software
  • Other intellectual property product

Question 2: Personnel

Full-time equivalent (FTE) – the ratio of working hours actually spent on scientific activities during a specific reference period divided by the total number of hours conventionally worked in the same period by an individual or a group. For example, an employee who is engaged in scientific activities for half a year has a full-time equivalence of 0.5. Personnel data reported should be consistent with expenditures data.

Scientific and professional – researchers and professionals engaged in the conception or creation of new knowledge. They conduct research and improve or develop concepts, theories, models, techniques instrumentation, software or operational methods. They require at least one academic degree or a nationally recognized professional qualification, as well as those with equivalent experience.

Technical – technicians and equivalent staff are persons whose main tasks require technical knowledge and experience in one or more fields of engineering, the physical and life sciences, or the social sciences, humanities and the arts. They perform scientific and technical tasks involving the application of concepts and operational methods and the use of research equipment, normally under the supervision of researchers.

Other – other supporting staff includes skilled and unskilled craftsmen, and administrative, secretarial and clerical staff participating in science and technology projects or directly associated with such projects.

Personnel in full time equivalent for intramural scientific and technological activities:

  1. Column A: Personnel engaged in Research and experimental development (R&D)
  2. Column B: Personnel engaged in Related scientific activities (RSA)
  3. Column C: Personnel engaged in the administration of extramural R&D programs
  4. Column D: Personnel engaged in the administration of extramural RSA programs
  5. Column E: Total personnel

Question 3: Sources of funds

Question 3A (i). Transfers for social sciences, humanities and the arts activities

Include payments and recipients for contracts, transfers and joint programs from/to other federal government departments. Please identify the amount and names of the origination and recipient programs.

Question 3A (ii). Sources of funds for total scientific and technological activities

This question identifies the sources of funds for expenditures on scientific activities reported for all three years. It will help to ensure that work funded from outside the department is not overlooked.

  • Departmental S&T budget – that portion of the total departmental budget which was spent on social sciences, humanities and the arts activities.
  • Revenues to / from other federal departments – money transferred from this program to another federal department or money transferred into this program from another federal department for activities in the social sciences, humanities and the arts.
  • Provincial government departments – all funds from the provincial government used for social sciences, humanities and the arts activities. The funds are referred to as payments, contributions, transfers, etc. Also include provincial portions of federal-provincial cost sharing programs performed by the department program.
  • Business enterprises – all funds from business enterprises used for social sciences, humanities and the arts activities performed by the department.
  • Other – all funds for social sciences, humanities and the arts activities from sources not specified above.

Question 4: Socio-economic objectives

Intramural and extramural scientific and technological expenditures by socio-economic objective for the reporting year by activity (research and experimental development, related scientific activities, and total).

  • 1. Exploration and exploitation of the Earth
  • 2. Infrastructure and general planning of land use:
    • 2.1: Transport
    • 2.2: Telecommunications
    • 2.3: Other
  • 3. Control and care of the environment
  • 4. Protection and improvement of human health
  • 5. Production, distribution and rational utilization of energy
  • 6. Agricultural production and technology:
    • 6.1: Agriculture
    • 6.2: Fishing
    • 6.3: Forestry
  • 7. Industrial production and technology
  • 8. Social structures and relationships
  • 9. Exploration and exploitation of space
  • 10. Non-oriented research
  • 11. Other civil research
  • 12. Defence

1. Exploration and exploitation of the Earth – scientific activities with objectives related to the exploration of the Earth's crust and mantle, seas, oceans and atmosphere, as well as on their exploitation. It also includes climatic and meteorological research, polar exploration (under various headings, as appropriate) and hydrology.

Examples:

  • General scientific activities
  • Mineral, oil and natural gas prospecting
  • Exploration and exploitation of the sea-bed
  • Earth's crust and mantle excluding sea-bed and studies of soil for agriculture (objective 6)
  • Hydrology - excludes scientific activities on: water supplied and disposal (objective 2) and water pollution (objective 3)
  • Sea and oceans
  • Atmosphere
  • Other scientific activities on the exploration and exploitation of the earth

Excludes: scientific activities on pollution (objective 3), soil improvement (objective 2), land-use and fishing (objective 6).

2. Infrastructure and general planning of land use – scientific activities on infrastructure and land development, including research on the construction of buildings. More generally, it covers all scientific activities relating to the general planning of land use. This includes scientific activities into protection against harmful effects in town and country planning but not scientific activities into other types of pollution (objective 3).

2.1 Transport systems – covers scientific activities on transport systems, including road accident prevention and ancillary services such as electronic traffic aids and radar stations. Also included is general scientific activities on transport systems, road and rail traffic, inland waterway and sea transport, air traffic, pipeline transport systems, works transport systems, combined transport systems and scientific activities on the potential effects on the environment of the planning and operation of transport systems. Scientific activities on transport equipment is included only when it forms part of the co-ordinated programmes for the development of improved and safer transport systems, otherwise, such research is classified in objective 7.

2.2 Telecommunications system – covers scientific activities on telecommunications services and the planning and organization of telecommunications networks. It includes, in particular, general scientific activities on telecommunications systems, telephones, telex, data transmission, radio and television (including cable TV).

2.3 Other scientific activities – covers scientific activities on the infrastructure and general planning of land-use.

Examples:

  • General scientific activities
  • General planning of land-use
  • Construction and planning of buildings
  • Civil engineering - excludes scientific activities on building materials and industrial processes (objective 7)
  • Water supply

3. Control and care of the environment – covers scientific activities aimed at improving the control of pollution, including the identification and analysis of the sources of pollution and their causes, and all pollutants, including their dispersal in the environment and the effects on humans, species (fauna, flora, microorganisms) and the biosphere. The development of monitoring facilities for the measurement of all kinds of pollution is included. The same is valid for the elimination and prevention of all forms of pollution in all types of environment.

Examples:

  • General scientific activities on the environment
  • Protection of atmosphere and climate
  • Protection of ambient air
  • Solid waste
  • Protection of ambient water
  • Protection of soil and groundwater
  • Noise and vibration
  • Protection of species and habitats
  • Protection against natural hazards
  • Radioactive pollution
  • Other scientific activities on the environment

4. Protection and improvement of human health – scientific activities aimed at protecting, promoting and restoring human health, broadly interpreted to include health aspects of nutrition and food hygiene. It ranges from preventative medicine, including all aspects of medical and surgical treatment, both for individuals and groups, and the provision of hospital and home care, to social medicine and paediatric and geriatric research.

Examples:

  • General scientific activities
  • Medical scientific activities, hospital treatment, surgery
  • Preventive medicine
  • Biomedical engineering and medicines
  • Occupational medicine
  • Nutrition and food hygiene
  • Drug abuse and addition
  • Social medicine
  • Hospital structure and organization of medical care
  • Other medical scientific activities

5. Production, distribution and rational utilization of energy – covers scientific activities aimed at improving the production, storage, transportation, distribution and rational use of all forms of energy. It also includes scientific activities on processes designed to increase the efficiency of energy production and distribution, and the study of energy conservation.

Examples:

  • Fossil fuels and their derivatives
  • Nuclear fission
  • Radioactive waste management including decommissioning with regard to fuel/energy
  • Nuclear fusion
  • Renewable energy sources
  • Rational utilization of energy

6. Agricultural production and technology – covers all scientific activities on the promotion of agriculture, forestry, fisheries and foodstuff production, or further knowledge on chemical fertilizers, biocides, biological pest control and the mechanization of agriculture, as well as concerning the impact of agricultural and forestry activities on the environment. Also covers scientific activities on improving food productivity and technology.

6.1 Agriculture – covers scientific activities on animal products, veterinary medicine, crops, food technology and other scientific activities on agricultural production and technology.

6.2 Fishing – covers scientific activities on fishing, salting, drying, and initial freezing of products (but not on preparation and canning (objective 7)), scientific activities on fish-farming, exploration of new fishing grounds, exploration and development of new and unconventional sources of seafood.

6.3 Forestry – covers scientific activities into the ecological and economic aspects of forestry and timber production.

7. Industrial production and technology – covers scientific activities on the improvement of industrial production and technology. It includes scientific activities on industrial products and their manufacturing processes except where they form an integral part of the pursuit of other objectives (e.g. defence, space, energy, agriculture).

Examples:

  • Increasing economic efficiency and competitiveness
  • Manufacturing and processing techniques
  • Petrochemical and coal by-products
  • Pharmaceutical products
  • Manufacture of motor vehicles and other means of transport
  • Aerospace equipment manufacturing and repairing
  • Electronic and related industries
  • Manufacture of electrical machinery and apparatus
  • Manufacture of non-electronic and non-electronical machinery
  • Manufacture of medical and surgical equipment and orthopaedic appliances
  • Manufacture of food products and beverages
  • Manufacture of clothing and textiles and leather goods
  • Recycling

8. Social structures and relationships – scientific activities on social objectives, as analyzed in particular by social and human sciences, which have no obvious connection with other objectives. This analysis includes quantitative, qualitative, organizational and forecasting aspects of social problems.

Examples:

  • Education – covers scientific activities aimed at supporting general or special education, including training, pedagogy, didactics, and targeted methods for specially gifted persons or those with learning disabilities. Applied to all levels of education as well as to subsidiary services to education.
  • Culture, recreation, religion and mass media – covers scientific activities aimed at improving the understanding of social phenomena related to culture activities, religion and leisure activities so as to define their impact on life in society, as well as to racial and cultural integration and on socio-cultural changes in these areas. The concept of "culture" covers sociology of science, religion, art, sport and leisure, and also comprises inter alia R&D on the media, the mastery of language and social integration, libraries, archives and external cultural policy.
  • Political and social system, structures and processes – covers scientific activities aimed at improving the understanding and supporting the political structure of society, public administration issues and economic policy, regional studies and multi-level governance, social change, social processes and social conflicts, the development of social security and social assistance systems, and the social aspects of the organization of work.

9. Exploration and exploitation of space – all civil space scientific activities relating to the scientific exploration of space, space laboratories, space travel and launch systems. Although civil space research is not in general concerned with particular objectives, it frequently has a specific goal, such as the advancement of knowledge (e.g. astronomy) or relates to particular applications (e.g. telecommunications satellites or earth observation).

Examples:

  • General scientific activities
  • Scientific exploration of space
  • Applied research programs
  • Launch systems
  • Space laboratories and space travel
  • Other research on the exploration and exploitation of space

10. Non-oriented research – basic activities motivated by scientific curiosity with the objective of increasing scientific knowledge. It also includes funding used to support postgraduate studies and fellowships.

Examples:

  • Mathematics and Computer Sciences
  • Physical Sciences
  • Chemical Sciences
  • Biological Sciences
  • Earth and Related (Environmental) Sciences
  • Engineering Sciences
  • Medical Sciences
  • Agricultural Sciences
  • Social Sciences
  • Humanities

11. Other civil research – civil scientific activities which cannot (yet) be classified to a particular objective.

12. Defence – covers scientific activities for military purposes. It also includes basic research and nuclear and space research financed by the Department of National defence. Civil scientific activities financed by ministries of defence, for example, in the fields of meteorology, telecommunications and health, should be classified in the relevant objectives.

Question 5: Expenditures and personnel by region

Scientific and technological expenditures and personnel of federal organizations for the reference year, including current and capital expenditures for intramural R&D and RSA and by scientific and professional and total personnel for R&D and RSA.

  1. Newfoundland and Labrador
  2. Prince Edward Island
  3. Nova Scotia
  4. New Brunswick
  5. Quebec (excluding NRC - Quebec)
  6. National Capital Region (NCR) - Quebec
  7. Ontario (excluding NRC - Ontario)
  8. National Capital Region (NCR) - Ontario
  9. Manitoba
  10. Saskatchewan
  11. Alberta
  12. British Columbia
  13. Yukon, Northwest Territories and Nunavut
  14. Canada Total

Federal Science Expenditures and Personnel (FSEP) 2018/2019 – Activities in the natural sciences and engineering

Information for respondents

Authority to publish

I hereby authorize Statistics Canada to disclose any or all portions of the data supplied on this questionnaire that could identify this department after the tabling of the forecast year Main Estimates.

  1. Yes
  2. No

Respondent Information:

  1. Name of person authorized to sign
  2. Signature
  3. Official position
  4. Program
  5. Department or agency
  6. E-mail address
  7. Telephone number

Enquiries to be directed to:

  1. Name
  2. Date
  3. Position title
  4. Telephone number
  5. Email address
  6. Fax number

Purpose

This survey collects financial and operating data on expenditures and full-time equivalent personnel on the scientific activities of Federal Government Public Administration in Canada.

Additional information

The data collected are used by federal and provincial science policy analysts, and are also part of the gross domestic expenditures on research and development (GERD). Your information may also be used by Statistics Canada for other statistical and research purposes.

Authority

Collected under the authority of the Statistics Act, Revised Statutes of Canada, 1985, Chapter S-19.

Completion of this questionnaire is a legal requirement under this Act.

Confidentiality

Statistics Canada is prohibited by law from releasing any information it collects which could identify any person, business, or organization, unless consent has been given by the respondent or as permitted by the Statistics Act. Statistics Canada will use the information from this survey for statistical purposes.

Data-sharing agreements

To reduce respondent burden, Statistics Canada has entered into data-sharing agreements with provincial and territorial statistical agencies and other government organizations, which have agreed to keep the data confidential and use them only for statistical purposes. Statistics Canada will only share data from this survey with those organizations that have demonstrated a requirement to use the data.

Section 11 of the Statistics Act provides for the sharing of information with provincial and territorial statistical agencies that meet certain conditions. These agencies must have the legislative authority to collect the same information, on a mandatory basis, and the legislation must provide substantially the same provisions for confidentiality and penalties for disclosure of confidential information as the Statistics Act. Because these agencies have the legal authority to compel businesses to provide the same information, consent is not requested and businesses may not object to the sharing of the data.

For this survey, there are Section 11 agreements with the provincial and territorial statistical agencies of Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Quebec, Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, British Columbia, and the Yukon.

The shared data will be limited to information pertaining to federal departments and agencies located within the jurisdiction of the respective province or territory.

Section 12 of the Statistics Act provides for the sharing of information with federal, provincial or territorial government organizations. Under Section 12, you may refuse to share your information with any of these organizations by writing a letter of objection to the Chief Statistician and returning it with the completed questionnaire. Please specify the organizations with which you do not want to share your data.

For this survey, there are Section 12 agreements with the statistical agencies of Prince Edward Island, the Northwest Territories, Nunavut and Industry Canada.

The shared data will be limited to information pertaining to federal departments and agencies located within the jurisdiction of the respective province or territory.

Record linkage

To enhance the data from this survey and to minimize the reporting burden, Statistics Canada may combine it with information from other surveys or from administrative sources.

Security of emails and faxes

Statistics Canada advises you that there could be a risk of disclosure during the transmission of information by facsimile or e-mail. However, upon receipt, Statistics Canada will provide the guaranteed level of protection afforded all information collected under the authority of the Statistics Act.

Return procedures

Please forward the completed questionnaire and listing of extramural performers through the Electronic File Transfer service (EFT).

For further inquiries:

Thank you for your co-operation.

FSEP - Introduction

This introduction is intended to provide an overview of the process of collecting science expenditure data; definitions of and explanatory notes on natural sciences and engineering, social sciences, humanities and the arts, scientific and technological activities, performance sectors, and other terms used are given in subsequent sections.

The collection of science expenditure data is organized by the Investment, Science and Technology Division (ISTD) of Statistics Canada. This exercise was formerly conducted under the aegis of the Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat but is now solely a Statistics Canada survey.

Collection is undertaken to gather essential data describing the recent, current and proposed state of the federal resources allocated to science. Federal science expenditures data are provided to Industry Canada who in turn use the data in the development of advice to the Assistant Deputy Ministers' Steering Committee on the Management of S&T, their Minister and the Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat, as well as in policy development and in monitoring the implementation of science policies. Statistics Canada maintains historical expenditure series in natural sciences and engineering dating back to 1963 and to 1971 in the social sciences, humanities and the arts. These data are available through the Investment, Science and Technology Division (ISTD) or through special requests.

The basic reporting unit is the budgetary program of a department or agency. Each budgetary program forms the subject of separate scientific expenditure reports for the natural and for the social science activities within it. Both the program and the program activities within it may be scientific in whole or in part only. Only expenditures on the scientific components of a program or its activity are reported. In some programs it will be difficult to distinguish between the natural and social sciences. However, some allocation must be made and in determining this allocation, the dominant orientation of the projects and the area of expertise of the personnel involved must be considered. Detailed definitions are given on the following pages.

On the questionnaires, the identified expenditures are looked at from several different viewpoints and in various subdivisions. Expenditures on research and development (R&D) and related scientific activities (RSA) are subdivided to provide an indication of the "what" of a department's scientific effort. Expenditures in each category of scientific activity are further subdivided into "current" and "capital" segments. Current expenditures are additionally subdivided by sector, to indicate the "where" and "by whom" the activity is performed (e.g., in business enterprise, in higher education).

The human resources allocated to scientific activities are summarized in terms of the involved categories of personnel (scientific and professional, technical, etc.) and the principal focus of their efforts (R&D, RSA and, administration of extramural programs).

When completed, checked for consistency with previous reports, entered into the database and totaled along the various dimensions, these data provide snapshots of the federal resources allocated to science, supporting not only the work of central agencies but also the submissions of departments and agencies requesting resources.

Purpose

This survey collects financial and operating data on expenditures and full-time equivalent personnel on the scientific activities of Federal Government Public Administration in Canada.

Question 1: Expenditures by activity and performer

General

The natural sciences and engineering consist of disciplines concerned with understanding, exploring, developing or utilizing the natural world. Included are the engineering and technology, mathematical, computer and information sciences, physical sciences, medical and health sciences, and agricultural sciences, veterinary sciences and forestry.

Expenditures by activity and performer

Scientific and technological (S&T) activities can be defined as all systematic activities which are closely concerned with the generation, advancement, dissemination and application of scientific and technology knowledge in all fields of science and technology, that is the natural sciences and engineering, and the social sciences, humanities and the arts.

The central activity is scientific research and experimental development (R&D). In addition there are a number of activities closely related to R&D, and are termed related scientific activities (RSA). Those identified as being appropriate for the federal government in the natural sciences are: scientific data collection, information services, special services and studies and education support.

The performer is equivalent to the sector in which the scientific activity is conducted. The basic distinction is between intramural and extramural performance. Extramural payments are classified on the basis of the performance sectors to which they are made. The appropriate extramural performers are business enterprise, higher education, Canadian non-profit institutions, provincial and municipal government, and foreign performers.

I. Performers

lntramural activities include all current expenditures incurred for scientific activities carried out by in-house personnel of units assigned to the program; the related gross fixed capital expenditures (acquisition of land, buildings, machinery and equipment for scientific activities); the administration of scientific activities by program employees; and, the purchase of goods and services to support in-house scientific activities (include royalties or licences for the use of patents and other intellectual property rights, the lease of capital goods (machinery and equipment, etc.) and the rental of buildings to support scientific activities performed by the statistical unit in the reference year).

The intramural expenditures reported for scientific activities are those direct costs, including salaries, associated with scientific programs. The costs should include that portion of a program's contribution to employee benefit plans (e.g., superannuation and compensation) which is applicable to the scientific personnel within the program. The summation of intramural R&D activity is synonymous with the performance of R&D for the entire economy (GERD).

Extramural performers are groups being funded by the federal government sector for S&T activities. In this survey the extramural performers include:

  • Business enterprise – business and government enterprises including public utilities and government-owned firms. Both financial and non-financial corporations are included. Incorporated consultants or unincorporated individuals providing scientific and engineering services are also included. Industrial research institutes located at Canadian universities are considered to be in the higher education sector.
  • Higher education – comprises all universities, colleges of technology and other institutes of post-secondary education, whatever their source of finance or legal status. It also includes teaching hospitals (non-teaching hospitals are in the Canadian non-profit sector) all research institutes, centers, experimental stations and clinics that have their scientific activities under the direct control of, or administered by, or associated with, the higher education establishments.
  • Canadian non-profit institutions – charitable foundations, voluntary health organizations, scientific and professional societies, non-teaching hospitals (teaching hospitals are in the higher education sector) and other organizations not established to earn profits. Non-profit institutions primarily serving or controlled by another sector should be included in the controlling sector.
  • Provincial and municipal governments – departments and agencies of these governments as well as provincial research organizations. Government enterprises, such as provincial utilities are included in the business enterprise sector, and non-teaching hospitals in the Canadian non-profit institutions sector.
  • Foreign performers – all foreign government agencies, foreign companies (including foreign subsidiaries of Canadian firms), international organizations, non-resident foreign nationals and Canadians studying or teaching abroad.

II. Research and experimental development (R&D)

Research and experimental development - comprise creative and systematic work undertaken in order to increase the stock of knowledge - including knowledge of humankind, culture and society - and to devise new applications of available knowledge.

R&D activities may be aimed at achieving either specific or general objectives. R&D is always aimed at new findings, based on original concepts (and their interpretation) or hypotheses. It is largely uncertain about its final outcome (or at least about the quantity of time and resources needed to achieve it), it is planned for and budgeted (even when carried out by individuals), and it is aimed at producing results that could be either freely transferred or traded in a marketplace.

For an activity to be an R&D activity, it must satisfy five core criteria:

  1. To be aimed at new findings (novel);
  2. To be based on original, not obvious, concepts and hypothesis (creative);
  3. To be uncertain about the final outcome (uncertainty);
  4. To be planned and budgeted (systematic);
  5. To lead to results that could be possibly reproduced (transferable/or reproducible).

Examples of R&D:

  1. A special investigation of a particular mortality in order to establish the side effects of certain cancer treatment is R&D.
  2. The investigation of new methods of measuring temperature is R&D, as is the study and development of new models for weather prediction.
  3. Investigation on the genetics of the species of plants in a forest in an attempt to understand natural controls for disease or pest resistance.
  4. The development of new application software and substantial improvements to operating systems and application programs.

R&D is generally carried out by specialized R&D units. However, an R&D project may also involve the use of non R&D facilities (e.g., testing grounds), the purchase or construction of specialized equipment and materials, and the assistance of other units. Costs of such items, attributable to the project, are to be considered R&D costs.

R&D may also be carried out by units normally engaged in other functions (e.g. a marine survey ship used for hydrological research, a geological survey team may be directed to work in a certain area in order to provide data for a geophysical research project). Such effort is part of an R&D project and, again, so far as is practical, the costs should be assigned to R&D expenditures.

On the other hand, R&D units may also be engaged in non R&D activities such as technical advisory services, testing, and construction of special equipment for other units. So far as is practical, the effort devoted to such operations should be included in the related scientific activities (RSA).

1. In-house R&D – R&D performed by personnel of the reporting program. It may include R&D carried out on behalf of another program or federal government department.

2. R&D contracts – R&D contracts to an outside institution or individual to fund R&D performed by the institution or individual. The criterion is: would the performer report the R&D contract as in-house (intramural) R&D that is government-funded? If the answer is yes the activity would be an R&D contract. If no, and the funding is to provide goods and services necessary to support the in-house R&D of the federal government it should be reported as In-house R&D.

3. R&D grants and contributions – awards to organizations or individuals for the conduct of R&D and intended to benefit the recipients rather than provide the program with goods, services or information. These funds are normally identical to that portion of the budgetary "grants and contributions" line object of expenditure which is devoted to R&D activities.

4. Research fellowships – awards to individuals for advanced research training and experience. Awards intended primarily to support the education of the recipients should be reported as "education support".

5. Administration of extramural programs – the costs of identifiable units engaged in the administration of contracts and grants and contributions for scientific activities that are to be performed outside the federal government. These expenditures should be broken down by the type of scientific activity supported, i.e. R&D or RSA.

6. Capital expenditures – the annual gross amount paid for the acquisition of fixed assets that are used repeatedly or continuously in the performance of scientific activities for more than one year. They should be reported in full for the period when they took place, whether acquired or developed in house, and should not be registered as an element of depreciation.

The most relevant types of assets used for capital expenditures are:

  • Land and buildings
  • Machinery and equipment
  • Capitalized computer software
  • Other intellectual property products

III. Related scientific activities (RSA)

Related scientific activities (RSA) are all systematic activities which are closely concerned with the generation, advancement, dissemination and application of scientific and technological knowledge. The types of related scientific activities for the natural sciences and engineering are described below.

7. In-house RSA – RSA performed by personnel of the reporting program. It may include RSA carried out on behalf of another program or federal government department.

In-house RSA activities include all current expenditures incurred for scientific activities carried out by in-house personnel of units assigned to the program; the purchase of goods and services to support in-house scientific activities (include royalties or licences for the use of patents and other intellectual property rights, and the rental of buildings to support scientific activities performed by the statistical unit in the reference year). Also include expenses of persons who provide ancillary services such as security, cleaning and maintenance work, finance and administration that are proportional to the RSA being conducted. However, the personnel providing these services are not to be included in the in-house personnel counts (see Section 2. Personnel).

The intramural expenditures reported to RSA are those direct costs, including salaries, associated with scientific programs. The cost should include that portion of a program's contribution to employee benefit plans (e.g., superannuation and compensation) which is applicable to the scientific personnel within the program. Also include the costs of self-employed individuals, consultants and researchers who are working on-site on the departments' RSA projects.

8. RSA contracts – contracts to an outside institution or individual to fund RSA performed by the institution or individual. The criterion is: would the performer report the RSA contract as in-house (intramural) RSA that is government-funded? If the answer is yes the activity would be an RSA contract. If no, and the funding is for the purchase goods and services to support the in-house RSA of the federal government department, it should be reported as In-house RSA (Item 7).

Contracts to other federal government departments should be reported as a transfer of funds in question 3A (i) and 3A (ii) of the questionnaire.

9. RSA grants and contributions – awards to organizations or individuals for the conduct of RSA and intended to benefit the recipients rather than provide the program with goods, services or information. These funds are normally identical to that portion of the budgetary "grants and contributions" line object of expenditure which is devoted to RSA.

In-house RSA, RSA Contracts and RSA grants and contributions can include the following items:

  • Scientific data collection – the gathering, processing, collating and analyzing of data on natural phenomena. These data are normally the results of surveys, routine laboratory analyses or compilations of operating records.

    Data collected as part of an existing or proposed research project are charged to research. Similarly, the costs of analyzing existing data as part of a research project are R&D costs, even when the data were originally collected for some other purpose. The development of new techniques for data collection is also to be considered a research activity. Examples of RSA scientific data collection are: routine geological, hydrographic, oceanographic and topographic surveys; routine astronomical observations; maintenance of meteorological records; and wildlife and fisheries surveys.

  • Information services – all work directed to collecting, coding, analyzing, evaluating, recording, classifying, translating and disseminating scientific and technological information as well as museum services. Included are the operations of scientific and technical libraries, S&T consulting and advisory services, the Patent Office, the publication of scientific journals and monographs, and the organizing of scientific conferences. Grants for the publication of scholarly works are also included.

    General purpose information services or information services directed primarily towards the general public are excluded, as are general departmental and public libraries. When individual budgets exist, the costs of libraries which belong to institutions otherwise entirely classified to another activity, such as R&D, should be assigned to information services. The costs of printing and distributing reports from another activity, such as R&D, are normally attributed to that activity.

  • Sub category under Information services:
  • Museum services – the collecting, cataloguing and displaying of specimens of the natural world or of representations of natural phenomena. The activity involves a systematic attempt to preserve and display items from the natural world; in some ways it could be considered an extension of information services. The scientific activities of natural history museums, zoological and botanical gardens, aquaria, planetaria and nature reserves are included. Parks which are not primarily restricted reserves for certain fauna or flora are excluded. In all cases the costs of providing entertainment and recreation to visitors should be excluded (e.g. restaurants, children's gardens and museums).

    When a museum also covers not only natural history but also aspects of human cultural activities, the museum's resources should be appropriated between the natural and social sciences. However, museums of science and technology, war, etc., which display synthetic or artificial objects and may also illustrate the operations of certain technologies, should be considered as engaged in museum services in social sciences.

  • Special services and studies – work directed towards the establishment of national and provincial standards for materials, devices, products and processes; the calibration of secondary standards; non-routine quality testing; feasibility studies and demonstration projects.
  • Sub categories under Special services and studies include:
  • Testing and standardization – concerns the maintenance of national standards, the calibration of secondary standards and the non-routine testing and analysis of materials, components, products, processes, soils, atmosphere, etc. These activities are related scientific activities (RSA). The development of new measures for standards, or of new methods of measuring or testing, is R&D. Exclude routine testing such as monitoring radioactivity levels or soil tests before construction.
  • Feasibility studies – technical investigations of proposed engineering projects to provide additional information required to reach decisions on implementation. Besides feasibility studies, the related activity of demonstration projects are to be included. Demonstration projects involve the operation of scaled-up versions of a facility or process, or data on factors such as costs, operational characteristics, market demand and public acceptance. Projects called "demonstration projects" but which conform to the definition of R&D should be considered R&D. Once a facility or process is operated primarily to provide a service or to gain revenue, rather than as a demonstration, it should no longer be included with feasibility studies. In all demonstration projects, only the net costs should be considered.
  • Education support – grants to individuals or institutions on behalf of individuals which are intended to support the post-secondary education of students in technology and the natural sciences. General operating or capital grants are excluded. The activity includes the support of foreign students in their studies of the natural sciences at Canadian or foreign institutions. Grants intended primarily to support the research of individuals at universities are either R&D grants or research fellowships.

    Awards intended primarily to support the education of the recipients should be reported as "education support".

10. Administration of extramural programs – the costs of identifiable units engaged in the administration of contracts and grants and contributions for scientific activities that are to be performed outside the federal government. These expenditures should be broken down by the type of scientific activity supported, i.e. R&D or RSA.

11. Capital expenditures – the annual gross amount paid for the acquisition of fixed assets that are used repeatedly or continuously in the performance of scientific activities for more than one year. They should be reported in full for the period when they took place, whether acquired or developed in house, and should not be registered as an element of depreciation.

The most relevant types of assets used for capital expenditures are:

  • Land and buildings
  • Machinery and equipment
  • Capitalized computer software
  • Other intellectual property products

Question 2: Personnel

Full-time equivalent (FTE) – the ratio of working hours actually spent on scientific activities during a specific reference period divided by the total number of hours conventionally worked in the same period by an individual or a group. For example, an employee who is engaged in scientific activities for half a year has a full-time equivalence of 0.5. Personnel data reported should be consistent with expenditures data.

Scientific and professional – researchers and professionals engaged in the conception or creation of new knowledge. They conduct research and improve or develop concepts, theories, models, techniques instrumentation, software or operational methods. They require at least one academic degree or a nationally recognized professional qualification, as well as those with equivalent experience.

Technical – technicians and equivalent staff are persons whose main tasks require technical knowledge and experience in one or more fields of engineering, the physical and life sciences, or the social sciences, humanities and the arts. They perform scientific and technical tasks involving the application of concepts and operational methods and the use of research equipment, normally under the supervision of researchers.

Other – other supporting staff includes skilled and unskilled craftsmen, and administrative, secretarial and clerical staff participating in science and technology projects or directly associated with such projects.

Personnel in full time equivalent for intramural scientific and technological activities:

  • Column A: Personnel engaged in Research and experimental development (R&D)
  • Column B: Personnel engaged in Related scientific activities (RSA)
  • Column C: Personnel engaged in the administration of extramural R&D programs
  • Column D: Personnel engaged in the administration of extramural RSA programs
  • Column E: Total personnel

Question 3: Sources of funds

Question 3A (i). Transfers for natural sciences and engineering activities

Include payments and recipients for contracts, transfers and joint programs from/to other federal government departments. Please identify the amount and names of the origination and recipient programs.

Question 3A (ii). Sources of funds for total scientific and technological activities

This question identifies the sources of funds for expenditures on scientific activities reported for all three years. It will help to ensure that work funded from outside the department is not overlooked.

  • Departmental S&T budget – that portion of the total departmental budget which was spent on natural science and engineering activities.
  • Revenues to / from other federal departments – money transferred from this program to another federal department or money transferred into this program from another federal department for activities in the natural sciences and engineering.
  • Provincial government departments – all funds from the provincial government used for natural science and engineering activities. The funds are referred to as payments, contributions, transfers, etc. Also include provincial portions of federal-provincial cost sharing programs performed by the department program.
  • Business enterprises – all funds from business enterprises used for natural science and engineering activities performed by the department.
  • Other – all funds for natural sciences and engineering activities from other sources not specified above.

Question 4: Socio-economic objectives

Intramural and extramural scientific and technological expenditures by socio-economic objective for the reporting year by activity (research and experimental development, related scientific activities, and total).

  • 1. Exploration and exploitation of the Earth
  • 2. Infrastructure and general planning of land use:
    • 2.1: Transport
    • 2.2: Telecommunications
    • 2.3: Other
  • 3. Control and care of the environment
  • 4. Protection and improvement of human health
  • 5. Production, distribution and rational utilization of energy
  • 6. Agricultural production and technology:
    • 6.1: Agriculture
    • 6.2: Fishing
    • 6.3: Forestry
  • 7. Industrial production and technology
  • 8. Social structures and relationships
  • 9. Exploration and exploitation of space
  • 10. Non-oriented research
  • 11. Other civil research
  • 12. Defence

1. Exploration and exploitation of the Earth – scientific activities with objectives related to the exploration of the Earth's crust and mantle, seas, oceans and atmosphere, as well as on their exploitation. It also includes climatic and meteorological research, polar exploration (under various headings, as appropriate) and hydrology.

Examples:

  • General scientific activities
  • Mineral, oil and natural gas prospecting
  • Exploration and exploitation of the sea-bed
  • Earth's crust and mantle excluding sea-bed and studies of soil for agriculture (objective 6)
  • Hydrology - excludes scientific activities on: water supplied and disposal (objective 2) and water pollution (objective 3)
  • Sea and oceans
  • Atmosphere
  • Other scientific activities on the exploration and exploitation of the earth

Excludes: scientific activities on pollution (objective 3), soil improvement (objective 2), land-use and fishing (objective 6).

2. Infrastructure and general planning of land use – scientific activities on infrastructure and land development, including research on the construction of buildings. More generally, it covers all scientific activities relating to the general planning of land use. This includes scientific activities into protection against harmful effects in town and country planning but not scientific activities into other types of pollution (objective 3).

2.1 Transport systems – covers scientific activities on transport systems, including road accident prevention and ancillary services such as electronic traffic aids and radar stations. Also included is general scientific activities on transport systems, road and rail traffic, inland waterway and sea transport, air traffic, pipeline transport systems, works transport systems, combined transport systems and scientific activities on the potential effects on the environment of the planning and operation of transport systems. Scientific activities on transport equipment is included only when it forms part of the co-ordinated programs for the development of improved and safer transport systems, otherwise, such research is classified in objective 7.

2.2 Telecommunications system – covers scientific activities on telecommunications services and the planning and organization of telecommunications networks. It includes, in particular, general scientific activities on telecommunications systems, telephones, telex, data transmission, radio and television (including cable TV).

2.3 Other scientific activities – covers scientific activities on the infrastructure and general planning of land-use.

Examples:

  • General scientific activities
  • General planning of land-use
  • Construction and planning of buildings
  • Civil engineering - excludes scientific activities on building materials and industrial processes (objective 7)
  • Water supply

3. Control and care of the environment – covers scientific activities aimed at improving the control of pollution, including the identification and analysis of the sources of pollution and their causes, and all pollutants, including their dispersal in the environment and the effects on humans, species (fauna, flora, microorganisms) and the biosphere. The development of monitoring facilities for the measurement of all kinds of pollution is included. The same is valid for the elimination and prevention of all forms of pollution in all types of environment.

Examples:

  • General scientific activities on the environment
  • Protection of atmosphere and climate
  • Protection of ambient air
  • Solid waste
  • Protection of ambient water
  • Protection of soil and groundwater
  • Noise and vibration
  • Protection of species and habitats
  • Protection against natural hazards
  • Radioactive pollution
  • Other scientific activities on the environment

4. Protection and improvement of human health – scientific activities aimed at protecting, promoting and restoring human health, broadly interpreted to include health aspects of nutrition and food hygiene. It ranges from preventative medicine, including all aspects of medical and surgical treatment, both for individuals and groups, and the provision of hospital and home care, to social medicine and pediatric and geriatric research.

Examples:

  • General scientific activities
  • Medical scientific activities, hospital treatment, surgery
  • Preventive medicine
  • Biomedical engineering and medicines
  • Occupational medicine
  • Nutrition and food hygiene
  • Drug abuse and addition
  • Social medicine
  • Hospital structure and organization of medical care
  • Other medical scientific activities

5. Production, distribution and rational utilization of energy – covers scientific activities aimed at improving the production, storage, transportation, distribution and rational use of all forms of energy. It also includes scientific activities on processes designed to increase the efficiency of energy production and distribution, and the study of energy conservation.

Examples:

  • Fossil fuels and their derivatives
  • Nuclear fission
  • Radioactive waste management including decommissioning with regard to fuel/energy
  • Nuclear fusion
  • Renewable energy sources
  • Rational utilization of energy

6. Agricultural production and technology – covers all scientific activities on the promotion of agriculture, forestry, fisheries and foodstuff production, or further knowledge on chemical fertilizers, biocides, biological pest control and the mechanization of agriculture, as well as concerning the impact of agricultural and forestry activities on the environment. Also covers scientific activities on improving food productivity and technology.

6.1 Agriculture – covers scientific activities on animal products, veterinary medicine, crops, food technology and other scientific activities on agricultural production and technology.

6.2 Fishing – covers scientific activities on fishing, salting, drying, and initial freezing of products (but not on preparation and canning (objective 7)), scientific activities on fish-farming, exploration of new fishing grounds, exploration and development of new and unconventional sources of seafood.

6.3 Forestry – covers scientific activities into the ecological and economic aspects of forestry and timber production.

7. Industrial production and technology – covers scientific activities on the improvement of industrial production and technology. It includes scientific activities on industrial products and their manufacturing processes except where they form an integral part of the pursuit of other objectives (e.g. defence, space, energy, agriculture).

Examples:

  • Increasing economic efficiency and competitiveness
  • Manufacturing and processing techniques
  • Petrochemical and coal by-products
  • Pharmaceutical products
  • Manufacture of motor vehicles and other means of transport
  • Aerospace equipment manufacturing and repairing
  • Electronic and related industries
  • Manufacture of electrical machinery and apparatus
  • Manufacture of non-electronic and non-electronical machinery
  • Manufacture of medical and surgical equipment and orthopaedic appliances
  • Manufacture of food products and beverages
  • Manufacture of clothing and textiles and leather goods
  • Recycling

8. Social structures and relationships – scientific activities on social objectives, as analyzed in particular by social and human sciences, which have no obvious connection with other objectives. This analysis includes quantitative, qualitative, organizational and forecasting aspects of social problems.

Examples:

  • Education – covers scientific activities aimed at supporting general or special education, including training, pedagogy, didactics, and targeted methods for specially gifted persons or those with learning disabilities. Applied to all levels of education as well as to subsidiary services to education.
  • Culture, recreation, religion and mass media – covers scientific activities aimed at improving the understanding of social phenomena related to culture activities, religion and leisure activities so as to define their impact on life in society, as well as to racial and cultural integration and on socio-cultural changes in these areas. The concept of "culture" covers sociology of science, religion, art, sport and leisure, and also comprises inter alia R&D on the media, the mastery of language and social integration, libraries, archives and external cultural policy.
  • Political and social system, structures and processes – covers scientific activities aimed at improving the understanding and supporting the political structure of society, public administration issues and economic policy, regional studies and multi-level governance, social change, social processes and social conflicts, the development of social security and social assistance systems, and the social aspects of the organization of work.

9. Exploration and exploitation of space – all civil space scientific activities relating to the scientific exploration of space, space laboratories, space travel and launch systems. Although civil space research is not in general concerned with particular objectives, it frequently has a specific goal, such as the advancement of knowledge (e.g. astronomy) or relates to particular applications (e.g. telecommunications satellites or earth observation).

Examples:

  • General scientific activities
  • Scientific exploration of space
  • Applied research programs
  • Launch systems
  • Space laboratories and space travel
  • Other research on the exploration and exploitation of space

10. Non-oriented research – basic activities motivated by scientific curiosity with the objective of increasing scientific knowledge. It also includes funding used to support postgraduate studies and fellowships.

Examples:

  • Mathematics and Computer Sciences
  • Physical Sciences
  • Chemical Sciences
  • Biological Sciences
  • Earth and Related (Environmental) Sciences
  • Engineering Sciences
  • Medical Sciences
  • Agricultural Sciences
  • Social Sciences
  • Humanities

11. Other civil research – civil scientific activities which cannot (yet) be classified to a particular objective.

12. Defence – covers scientific activities for military purposes. It also includes basic research and nuclear and space research financed by the Department of National defence. Civil scientific activities financed by ministries of defence, for example, in the fields of meteorology, telecommunications and health, should be classified in the relevant objectives.

Question 5: Expenditures and personnel by region

Scientific and technological expenditures and personnel of federal organizations for the reference year, including current and capital expenditures for intramural R&D and RSA and by scientific and professional and total personnel for R&D and RSA.

Regions include:

  1. Newfoundland and Labrador
  2. Prince Edward Island
  3. Nova Scotia
  4. New Brunswick
  5. Quebec (excluding NRC - Quebec)
  6. National Capital Region (NCR) - Quebec
  7. Ontario (excluding NRC - Ontario)
  8. National Capital Region (NCR) - Ontario
  9. Manitoba
  10. Saskatchewan
  11. Alberta
  12. British Columbia
  13. Yukon, Northwest Territories and Nunavut
  14. Canada Total

Wholesale Trade Survey (Monthly): CVs for Total Sales by Geography – February 2017 to February 2018

CVs for Total Sales by Geography – February 2017 to February 2018
Table summary
This table displays the results of CVs for Total Sales by Geography. The information is grouped by geography (appearing as row headers), Month, 201702, 201703, 201704, 201705, 201706, 201707, 201708, 201709, 201710, 201711, 201712, 201801, and 201802 (appearing as column headers), calculated using percentage unit of measure (appearing as column headers).
Geography Month
201702 201703 201704 201705 201706 201707 201708 201709 201710 201711 201712 201801 201802
percentage
Canada 0.7 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.6 0.7 0.7 0.7 0.6 0.7 0.9 0.9 0.7
Newfoundland and Labrador 0.3 0.3 0.4 0.4 0.4 0.4 0.5 0.5 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.6
Prince Edward Island 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Nova Scotia 3.1 1.4 2.4 2.9 3.1 2.1 1.2 1.2 1.6 1.3 4.0 2.1 3.5
New Brunswick 1.1 1.5 1.9 2.3 3.3 1.9 4.0 2.8 1.5 2.4 1.8 1.0 0.9
Québec 2.3 2.3 3.0 2.3 2.1 2.8 2.3 2.4 2.2 2.6 2.5 2.8 2.4
Ontario 1.0 1.2 0.9 0.8 0.9 0.8 1.0 1.0 0.8 0.9 1.3 1.2 0.9
Manitoba 1.6 1.1 2.0 2.7 2.2 1.8 0.8 1.1 1.5 1.2 1.6 1.7 2.2
Saskatchewan 0.3 0.5 1.1 0.5 0.4 0.8 0.9 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.6 0.8 0.3
Alberta 1.4 1.6 1.3 1.8 0.9 1.0 0.9 1.7 1.2 1.1 2.8 1.5 1.2
British Columbia 1.9 1.6 1.5 1.3 1.3 1.7 1.2 1.6 1.8 1.3 2.1 1.7 1.9
Yukon Territory 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Northwest Territories 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Nunavut 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0

Integrated Business Statistics Program (IBSP)

This guide is designed to assist you as you complete the 2016 Annual Civil Aviation Survey. If you need more information, please call the Statistics Canada Help Line at the number below.

Your answers are confidential.

Statistics Canada is prohibited by law from releasing any information it collects which could identify any person, business, or organization, unless consent has been given by the respondent or as permitted by the Statistics Act.

Statistics Canada will use information from this survey for statistical purposes.

Help Line: 1-800-972-9692


Table of contents

Business or organization and contact information
Balance Sheet, Annual - Statement 20 (I)
Statement of Revenues and Expenses, Annual - Statement 21 (I, II)

Business or organization and contact information

This section verifies or requests basic identifying information of the business or organization such as legal name, operating name (if applicable), contact information of the designated contact person, current operational status, and main activity(ies).

1. Legal name and Operating name

Legal Name

The legal name is one recognized by law, thus it is the name liable for pursuit or for debts incurred by the business or organization. In the case of a corporation, it is the legal name as fixed by its charter or the statute by which the corporation was created.

Modifications to the legal name should only be done to correct a spelling error or typo.

To indicate a legal name of another legal entity you should instead indicate it in question 3 by selecting 'Not currently operational' and then choosing the applicable reason and providing the legal name of this other entity along with any other requested information.

Operating Name

The operating name is a name the business or organization is commonly known as if different from its legal name. The operating name is synonymous with trade name.

2. Designated contact person

Verify or provide the requested contact information of the designated business or organization contact person.The designated contact person is the person who should receive this questionnaire.The designated contact person may not always be the one who actually completes the questionnaire.If different than the designated contact person, the contact information of the person completing the questionnaire can be indicated later in the questionnaire.

3. Current operational status

Verify or provide the current operational status of the business or organization identified by the legal and operating name in question 1.If indicating the operational status of the business or organization is 'Not currently operational' then indicate an applicable reason and provide the requested information.

4. Main activity

This question verifies the business or organization's current main activity as classified by the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). The North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) is an industry classification system developed by the statistical agencies of Canada, Mexico and the United States. Created against the background of the North American Free Trade Agreement, it is designed to provide common definitions of the industrial structure of the three countries and a common statistical framework to facilitate the analysis of the three economies. NAICS is based on supply-side or production-oriented principles, to ensure that industrial data, classified to NAICS, are suitable for the analysis of production-related issues such as industrial performance.

The target entity for which NAICS is designed are businesses and other organizations engaged in the production of goods and services. They include farms, incorporated and unincorporated businesses and government business enterprises. They also include government institutions and agencies engaged in the production of marketed and non-marketed services, as well as organizations such as professional associations and unions and charitable or non-profit organizations and the employees of households.

The associated NAICS should reflect those activities conducted by the business or organizational unit(s) targeted by this questionnaire only, as identified in the 'Answering this questionnaire' section and which can be identified by the specified legal and operating name. The main activity is the activity which most defines the targeted business or organization's main purpose or reason for existence. For a business or organization that is for-profit, it is normally the activity that generates the majority of the revenue for the entity.

The NAICS classification contains a limited number of activity classifications; the associated classification might be applicable for this business or organization even if it is not exactly how you would describe this business or organization's main activity.

Please note that any modifications to the main activity through your response to this question might not necessarily be reflected prior to the transmitting of subsequent questionnaires and as a result they may not contain this updated information.

If the current NAICS associated with this business or organizations is not correct, please provide a brief description of the main activity and provide any additional information as requested.

Balance Sheet, Annual – Statement 20 (I)

Financial assets

Current assets

Include:

  • cash, bank balances (including deposits in transit, special deposits for the payments of debts, and so on) and short-term investments due within one year from the date of the balance sheet;
  • current accounts and notes receivable as well as other current assets such as inventories, charges to subscribers on transportation contracts, interests and dividends receivable, and so on.

All other financial assets – (Include investments and special funds.)

Include:

  • investments in associated companies
  • other investments such as investments in stocks, bonds, and so on
  • special funds such as equipment purchase funds
  • funds set aside for such special purposes as contractual deposits, pension funds, self-insurance funds, and so on.

Property and equipment

Operating - flight equipment – (Include capital leases.)

Include:

  • flight equipment owned and/or under capital leases;
  • the cost of aircraft (airframes), aircraft engines, propellers, components (aircraft communication and navigational equipment) and spare parts that have been purchased outright. Flight equipment under capital leases includes the cost of flight equipment acquired under a capital or finance lease, in other words, a lease for a period considered to be the whole or nearly the whole life of the aircraft.

Accumulated depreciation and amortization - flight equipment

Include:

  • accumulated depreciation and amortization of flight equipment owned and/or under capital leases;
  • accrued charges representing losses, not replaced by current repairs, occurring in physical property and suffered through current lessening of service value due to wear and tear from use and the action of time and the elements; and losses occurring through obsolescence, supersession, new technological developments, changes in popular demand and the requirements of public authority.

Operating - ground property and equipment – (Include capital leases.)

Include:

  • ground property and equipment owned and/or under capital leases;
  • the cost of non-airborne communication and meteorological equipment, ramp equipment, maintenance and engineering equipment, surface transport vehicles and equipment, furniture, fixtures and office equipment, buildings and land as well as miscellaneous ground equipment such as medical equipment, airport and lighting equipment, passenger service equipment, hotel, restaurant and food service equipment, storage and distribution equipment. Ground property and equipment under capital leases includes the cost of ground property and equipment under a capital or finance lease, in other words, a lease for a period considered to be the whole or nearly the whole life of the property or equipment.

Accumulated depreciation and amortization - ground property and equipment

Include:

  • accumulated depreciation and amortization of ground property and equipment owned and/or under capital leases;
  • accrued charges representing losses, not replaced by current repairs, occurring in physical property and suffered through current lessening of service value due to wear and tear from use and the action of time and the elements; and losses occurring through obsolescence, supersession, new technological developments, changes in popular demand and the requirements of public authority.

Non-operating property and equipment – (Include capital leases.)

Include:

  • the cost of all non-operating property and equipment, in other words, all property and equipment not included in the "operating" categories above.

Accumulated depreciation and amortization - non-operating property and equipment

Include:

  • accumulated depreciation and amortization of the non-operating property and equipment.

All other assets

Include:

  • long-term prepayments
  • developmental and pre-operating costs such as the cost of extraordinary training
  • unamortized discounts and expenses on the issue of long-term debt securities
  • property acquisition adjustments
  • other intangibles such as payments made for patents, copyrights, and so on, and other deferred charges.

Total assets

The sum of the assets above less the accumulated depreciation and amortization.

Liabilities and capital

Current liabilities

Include:

  • current accounts and traffic balances payable, including balances subject to current settlement and payable to associated companies and/or shareholders, and notes payable on demand or within one year from the date of the balance sheet;
  • the current portion of long-term debt and the current obligations under capital leases;
  • air traffic liabilities (unearned transportation revenue), which includes the value of passenger tickets sold but not used or refunded as of the date of the balance sheet, and pre-paid amounts for the transportation of baggage, freight and mail for which the transportation has not occurred as of the date of the balance sheet;
  • salaries and wages accrued and unpaid, taxes accrued and unpaid, dividends payable, deposits by subscribers on transportation contracts (air travel plan liabilities, in other words, deposits received under air travel plan contracts) and other current and accrued liabilities.

Advances from associated companies and/or shareholders

Include the net amount from associated companies and/or shareholders for notes, loans or advances which are not currently settled.

Long-term debt and other non-current liabilities – (Include capital leases.)

Include:

  • the face value or principal amount of debt securities (for example, bonds, trust certificates, debentures, notes) issued and assumed by the air carrier and in the hands of others, which is not payable within twelve months of the balance sheet date;
  • long-term obligations under capital leases, which refers to the present value of unexpired contracts for the acquisition of aircraft under such lease arrangements.

Deferred income taxes

Include:

  • taxes that will be owed on income, but that have not yet been assessed.

All other liabilities

Include:

  • deferred credits which correspond to unamortized premiums on all classes of long-term debt, and other deferred credits such as securities issued or assumed by the air carrier, and other unadjusted accounts that cannot be cleared as of the date of the balance sheet;
  • provisions for major overhauls such as for flight equipment (in other words, liabilities of uncertain value or timing associated with the complete disassembly and inspection or repair of an aircraft, engine or other component of an aircraft) and other provisions such as liabilities of uncertain value or timing.

Shareholders' equity

Capital stock

Include:

  • the equity capital invested in a business through the purchase of various classes of common and preferred shares.

Retained earnings

Include:

  • the portion of after-tax profits left over, after dividends have been paid to shareholders, for reinvestment into the company. If this account is negative, then the amount indicated for this item should be shown with a negative (-) sign.

All other items

Include:

  • other paid-in capital and reserves. Other paid-in capital or contributed surplus includes the premiums or discounts that have resulted from selling stock, and stock received from donations. Reserves include any reserve fund such as reserve for self-insurance, reserve for pension, reserves against potential future losses, and so on. Also, include proprietorship or partnership accounts (balance year-end).

Total liabilities and capital

The sum of liabilities and capital plus the sum of shareholders' equity which should equal total assets.

Statement of Revenues and Expenses, Annual – Statement 21 (I, II)

Scheduled services

Transportation of passengers or goods, or both, by an aircraft provided by an air carrier that operates the air service and that, directly or indirectly, sells some or all of its seats or part or all of its cargo space to the public on a price per seat, price per unit of mass or price per volume of cargo basis.

Charter services

Transportation of passengers or goods, or both, by aircraft pursuant to a contract under which a person, other than the air carrier that operates the air service, or its agent, reserves a block of seats or part of the cargo space of an aircraft for the person's use or for resale to the public.

Include air ambulance service and the movement of people and goods to logging or heli-logging sites.

Exclude firefighting and heli-logging activities and the movement of people and goods to a firefighting site. (A complete list of activities which are specialty and therefore not subject to filing requirements as charter can be found in the Transport Canada document entitled "Starting a Commercial Air Service", TP 8880. This document can be found at http://www.tc.gc.ca/eng/civilaviation/publications/tp8880-menu-5178.htm or at http://www.tc.gc.ca/Publications/en/tp8880/pdf/hr/tp8880e.pdf.)

Passenger revenue

Refers to the revenue earned from the transportation of passengers on scheduled and charter services. Include revenue from all surcharges (baggage, fuel, seat selection, and so on) that are retained by the air carrier. Exclude amounts such as taxes, navigation fees, security fees, and so on that are collected but passed on to other entities.

Goods revenue

Refers to the revenue earned from the transportation of goods on scheduled and charter services. Exclude taxes such as the Goods and Services Tax (GST), Harmonized Sales Tax (HST) or Provincial Sales Tax (PST).

All other flight-related revenue

Refers to the revenue earned from air transport activities not included in passenger revenue or goods revenue. Include revenue from other flying services such as flying training, recreational flying and other specialty flying.

All other revenue

Include subsidies and revenue earned from all other sources.

Total operating revenue

The sum of passenger revenue, goods revenue, other flight-related revenue and revenue from all other sources.

Operating expenses - Ground property and equipment maintenance

Employee wages, salaries and benefits

Direct labour costs (wages and salaries) expended on the maintenance of ground property and equipment.

Include benefits such as employer contributions to pensions, medical benefits, insurance, and so on.

All other maintenance - ground property and equipment expenses

Expenses, both direct and indirect, incurred in the repair and upkeep of ground property and equipment.

Include materials and supplies, purchased repair services and all other related expenses.

Total maintenance - ground property and equipment expenses

The sum of the previous two expense items.

Operating expenses - Aircraft operations

Flight crew wages, salaries and benefits

Include the wages, salaries and benefits for flight crews (pilot, co-pilot, navigator, and so on).

Include benefits such as employer contributions to pensions, medical benefits, insurance, and so on and layover expenses such as hotels and meals.

Aircraft fuel and oil

Expenses for turbo fuel, gasoline and all other fuel and oil consumed such as turbine oil and piston oil.

Include throughput charges, non-refundable duties and taxes.

Landing fees

Include airport landing fees paid both in Canada and outside of Canada.

Navigation fees

Charges remitted to NAV CANADA or other international suppliers for the provision of air navigation services. Air navigation services include aeronautical communication services, aeronautical information services, aeronautical radio navigation services, air traffic control services, aviation weather services, emergency assistance services and flight information services.

Aircraft insurance

Expenses for insurance against accidental damage to flight equipment while in flight or on the ground and for insurance against liability occurring from the operation of aircraft or, in the case of non-insurance, the resulting expenses for which the carrier is liable.

Aircraft rental

Expenses incurred for the rental of aircraft (and crew) from other carriers, such as in chartering, interchange and operating or short-term lease agreements.

All other aircraft operation expenses

Expenses incurred directly for the in-flight operation and related standby time of aircraft which are not elsewhere classified.

Total aircraft operations expenses

The sum of the previous seven expense items.

Operating expenses - Flight equipment maintenance

Employee wages, salaries and benefits

Direct labour costs (wages and salaries) expended on the maintenance of flight equipment.

Include benefits such as employer contributions to pensions, medical benefits, insurance, and so on.

Materials and supplies

Expenses on materials and supplies for the maintenance of flight equipment.

Purchased repair services

Expenses for repair services for the maintenance of flight equipment purchased from outside suppliers.

All other maintenance - flight equipment expenses

Expenses, both direct and indirect, incurred in the repair and upkeep of flight equipment.

Total maintenance - flight equipment expenses

The sum of the previous four expense items.

Operating expenses - In-flight services

Employee wages, salaries and benefits

Include:

  • the wages, salaries and benefits paid to cabin crews (flight attendants, and so on);
  • benefits such as employer contributions to pensions, medical benefits, insurance, and so on, and layover expenses such as hotels and meals.

Passenger food and supplies

Include expenses for in-flight meals, complimentary drinks, and so on, and the cost of supplies and personal services furnished to passengers.

Passenger liability insurance

Include the premiums for passenger liability and accident insurance paid by the carrier.

All other in-flight service expenses

Include passenger-related expenses incurred due to interrupted flights, including hotels, meals, taxi fares and other expense items, the cost of other services provided to passengers, such as pay, allowances and the cost of passenger service personnel, and all other services provided for the comfort of passengers in transit.

Total in-flight service expenses

The sum of the previous four expense items.

Operating expenses - Aircraft and traffic servicing

Employee wages, salaries and benefits

Include:

  • the wages, salaries and benefits paid to ground personnel;
  • benefits such as employer contributions to pensions, medical benefits, insurance, and so on.

Purchased services

Expenses for aircraft and traffic servicing purchased from outside suppliers.

All other aircraft and traffic servicing expenses

Include expenses incurred on the ground for scheduling or preparing aircraft for arrival and takeoff, expenses incurred in enplaning and deplaning passenger and cargo traffic, and expenses involved in servicing and handling individual aircraft and traffic on the ground, in preparing aircraft crews for flight assignment, in controlling the in-flight movements of aircraft and the in-flight expenses of handling all traffic including baggage.

Total aircraft and traffic servicing expenses

The sum of the previous three expense items.

Operating expenses - Promotion and sales

Employee wages, salaries and benefits

Include:

  • the wages, salaries and benefits paid to all staff engaged in reservations, ticketing, sales and promotional activities;
  • benefits such as employer contributions to pensions, medical benefits, insurance, and so on.

All other promotion and sales expenses

Include:

  • passenger and cargo commission expenses;
  • the net commission payable to others for the sale of transportation on the reporting carrier's service less the commission receivable from the reporting carrier's sale of transportation on other carriers' services, advertising and publicity expenses and any related expenses, accommodation costs, agency fees for outside services, expenses associated with reservations, city ticket offices and other sales expenses.

Total promotion and sales expenses

The sum of the previous two expense items.

Operating expenses - Depreciation

Depreciation - flight equipment

Include:

  • provisions for the depreciation of flight equipment only;
  • all charges incurred in normal wear and tear on flight equipment which have not been replaced by current year repair, as well as losses in service ability.

All other depreciation

Include:

  • provisions for the depreciation of all non-flight ground and property equipment;
  • all charges incurred in normal wear and tear which have not been replaced by current year repair, as well as losses in service ability;
  • charges for the amortization of capitalized development and other intangible assets.

Total depreciation

The sum of the previous two expense items.

Operating expenses - All other expenses

Include general administration.

Employee wages, salaries and benefits

Include:

  • the wages, salaries and benefits paid to all employees performing the general and administrative functions of the air carrier;
  • benefits such as employer contributions to pensions, medical benefits, insurance, and so on.

Exclude all amounts reported in the previous six wages, salaries and benefits categories.

All other expenses

Include:

  • all operating expenses and general administration expenses not reported elsewhere;
  • expenses for general financial accounting activities, supplementary labour income, property taxes, building rentals, communications purchased, purchasing activities, representation at law, and all other operational administration expenses not directly applicable to a particular function that are not included in the previous operating expenses categories;
  • expenses such as incidental air transport-related expenses associated with revenue reported as "all other revenue";
  • all miscellaneous operating expenses not covered elsewhere;
  • staff reduction expenses.

Total other expenses

The sum of the previous two expense items.

Total operating expenses

The sum of the eight expenses sub-totals, in other words, Total maintenance - ground property and equipment expenses, Total aircraft operations expenses, and so on.

Operating income

Net operating income (a loss should be a negative number)

Total operating revenue less total operating expenses – calculated from the previous questions.

Non-operating income/expenses

Interest and discount income

Include interest income from all sources and cash discounts on the purchase of materials and supplies.

Interest expenses

Include interest on unpaid taxes and all classes of debt including premiums, discounts and expenses on short-term obligations, amortization of premiums, discounts and expenses on short-term and long-term obligations.

All other net non-operating income (enter a negative number for a loss)

Include:

  • capital gains (or losses) from retiring operating property and equipment, aircraft equipment, expendable parts, miscellaneous materials and supplies and other assets, when they are sold or otherwise retired from service as part of a general program and not as incidental sales performed as a service to others;
  • gains or losses made on investments in securities;
  • net miscellaneous non-operating income or loss, which refers to revenue and expenses attributable to financing or other activities that are not an integral part of the air transportation activities undertaken by the carrier, or its incidental services. These could include dividend income, the balance of all income or losses from affiliated companies reimbursed to the carrier, foreign exchange adjustments and special items, such as restructuring expenses, which do not occur on a regular basis.

Exclude staff reduction expenses which should be included under all other expenses.

Net non-operating income (a loss should be a negative number)

The sum of the previous three income or expense items.

Provision for income taxes

Include the provision for taxes payable on net income for the accounting period and adjustments of income taxes relating to previous years, including provisions for deferred income taxes resulting from differences between accounting income and taxable income that arise when the time of including items of revenue and expense in the computation of accounting income and taxable income do not coincide. If the net amount is negative, then the amount indicated for this item should be shown with a negative (-) sign.

Net income (a loss should be a negative number)

Net operating income plus net non-operating income less the provision for income taxes.

Fuel and oil consumed

Turbo fuel consumed

Include fuel used in both turboprop and jet aircraft.

Provide the quantity and expenses for turbo fuel consumed. Turbo fuel includes the turbine fuel uplifted for all aircraft in the carrier's fleet. Fuel uplift can be determined based on delivery notes or invoices, aircraft onboard measurement systems or, if the fuel was supplied by a customer, estimated based on hours flown. Report the quantity of turbo fuel consumed in litres.

Include turbo fuel consumed for all scheduled and/or charter operations, regardless of where purchased. The expenses for turbo fuel consumed should be reported in Canadian dollars, regardless of where purchased. Include throughput charges, non-refundable duties and taxes. If the fuel was supplied by a customer, an approximate value may be provided based on prevailing market rates.

Conversion factor

To convert gallons (imperial) into litres (l), multiply by 4.546092.

All other fuel and oil consumed

Provide the quantity and expenses for all non-turbo fuel and oil consumed. Report the quantity of all other fuel and oil consumed in litres. The quantity should include gasoline, turbine oil, piston oil and all other types of fuel and oil consumed for all scheduled and/or charter operations, regardless of where purchased. The expenses for all other fuel and oil consumed should be reported in Canadian dollars, regardless of where purchased. Include throughput charges, non-refundable duties and taxes.

Conversion factor

To convert gallons (imperial) into litres (l), multiply by 4.546092.

Total fuel and oil consumed

The sum of the quantities and expenses reported in the previous two items.

Employment

Average number of employees

Refer to the average number of people employed for each of the six categories of personnel.

Include all employees, temporary or permanent, on the payroll of the air carrier during the reporting period. Include part-time employees, prorated to the amount of time worked when compared to full-time employees (for example, two part-time employees working half-time are equivalent to one full-time employee).

Wages and salaries expenses

Include a breakdown of the wages and salaries paid for each of the six categories of personnel.

Exclude all benefits, in other words, employer contributions to pensions, medical benefits, insurance, and so on or layover expenses, such as hotels and meals, for flight and cabin crews.

Total employees

The sum of the number and the wages and salaries expenses for the six categories of personnel.

Revenue or expenses by area of operation

Passenger revenue

Include a breakdown of the revenue earned from the transportation of passengers for each province, territory and outside of Canada based on where the transportation service was provided. Total passenger revenue should equal the sum of passenger revenue from scheduled services and charter services previously reported.

Goods revenue

Include a breakdown of the revenue earned from the transportation of goods for each province, territory and outside of Canada based on where the transportation service was provided. Total goods revenue should equal the sum of goods revenue from scheduled services and charter services previously reported.

Employee wages and salaries

Include a breakdown of employee wages and salaries for each province, territory and outside of Canada based on where the employees are located. Total employee wages and salaries should equal the total wages and salaries expenses reported in the "Employment" section above.

Integrated Business Statistics Program (IBSP)

Reporting Guide

This guide is designed to assist you as you complete the 2017 Farm Financial Survey. If you need more information, please call the Statistics Canada Help Line at the number below.

Your answers are confidential.

Statistics Canada is prohibited by law from releasing any information it collects which could identify any person, business, or organization, unless consent has been given by the respondent or as permitted by the Statistics Act.

Statistics Canada will use information from this survey for statistical purposes.

Help Line: 1-877-949-9492

Table of contents

Reporting instructions

Additional information that may be useful in the completion of this electronic questionnaire include the operation's 2017:

  • financial statements
  • tax files
  • AgriInvest Annual Statement of Account
  • AgriStability Calculation of Program Benefits Notice.

Also:

  • individual T1 and T4 tax forms
  • market value assessments of land and buildings from sources such as property tax assessments or local real estate listings.

Definitions

Legal Name

The legal name is one recognized by law, thus it is the name liable for pursuit or for debts incurred by the business or organization. In the case of a corporation, it is the legal name as fixed by its charter or the statute by which the corporation was created.

Modifications to the legal name should only be done to correct a spelling error or typo.

To indicate a legal name of another legal entity you should instead indicate it in question 3 by selecting 'Not currently operational' and then choosing the applicable reason and providing the legal name of this other entity along with any other requested information.

Operating Name

The operating name is a name the business or organization is commonly known as if different from its legal name. The operating name is synonymous with trade name.

Current main activity of the business or organization

This question verifies the business or organization's current main activity as classified by the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). The North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) is an industry classification system developed by the statistical agencies of Canada, Mexico and the United States. Created against the background of the North American Free Trade Agreement, it is designed to provide common definitions of the industrial structure of the three countries and a common statistical framework to facilitate the analysis of the three economies. NAICS is based on supply-side or production-oriented principles, to ensure that industrial data, classified to NAICS, are suitable for the analysis of production-related issues such as industrial performance.

The target entity for which NAICS is designed are businesses and other organizations engaged in the production of goods and services. They include farms, incorporated and unincorporated businesses and government business enterprises. They also include government institutions and agencies engaged in the production of marketed and non-marketed services, as well as organizations such as professional associations and unions and charitable or non-profit organizations and the employees of households.

The associated NAICS should reflect those activities conducted by the business or organizational unit(s) targeted by this questionnaire only, as identified in the 'Answering this questionnaire' section and which can be identified by the specified legal and operating name. The main activity is the activity which most defines the targeted business or organization's main purpose or reason for existence. For a business or organization that is for-profit, it is normally the activity that generates the majority of the revenue for the entity.

The NAICS classification contains a limited number of activity classifications; the associated classification might be applicable for this business or organization even if it is not exactly how you would describe this business or organization's main activity.

Please note that any modifications to the main activity through your response to this question might not necessarily be reflected prior to the transmitting of subsequent questionnaires and as a result they may not contain this updated information.

Reporting period information

Question 1

Fiscal year-end refers to the last day of the twelve-month period a business uses as its income tax year.

If this operation's fiscal year-end is close to the survey date, e.g., April 30, 2017, and the current financial statements are not yet available, use the most recent financial statements, e.g., April 30, 2016.

Characteristics of the operators and operation

Question 1

A farm operator is an individual responsible for the day-to-day operation of the farm, who participates in the decisions to borrow money, to rent, buy or sell assets and to manage debts.

Include farm owner-operators and hired managers.

Legal operating arrangement

Question 6

Definitions:
A sole proprietorship is a farming business in which there is one person that makes the business decisions, takes the risks and makes the profits.

A corporation is a farming business that has been registered with a province as a legal entity.

A partnership is an agreement to share the profits and losses of the business and is formally registered as such with the Canada Revenue Agency for tax purposes.

The partners jointly own the operation's property and share a joint bank account, joint accounting, single financing, use of the partnership name, etc.

A cooperative and communal operations is a farming business that is operated by a community of people. (All Hutterite colonies are considered to be cooperatives even if they are incorporated).

A joint venture is similar to a partnership, but is not exactly the same. The parties in a joint venture are usually separate businesses, which join together to accomplish a project. Each party contributes assets to the joint venture. Often, one of the partners is an operator and the others provides the use of capital for the operation.

A trust is when management and decision making powers of an investment or business is held by a third party. Therefore, the owners cannot make decisions concerning the business. However, the actual owners still receive the profits generated by the trust.

Family's percent ownership for corporations and partnerships:
• if the partnership is husband and wife only, enter 100%
• if the partnership is owned by siblings, enter only the share belonging to the family of the selected operator.

Land use

Question 16

Rounding procedures for this section:

  • round all areas of land to the nearest whole number, e.g., for "17.5 acres" round-up to "18 acres"
  • if the area of land is less than half an acre, round-up to 1 acre.

Workable land includes all arable or cleared land including area in field crops, vegetables, sod, nursery, fruits, berries and nuts, summerfallow, and tame or seeded pasture land.

Non-workable land includes land that is not or cannot be used for agricultural purposes plus land on which all farm buildings are located:

  • all idle land (land not used for agricultural purposes) includes woodlots, sugarbush, tree windbreaks, bush, ponds, bogs, marshes, sloughs, buffer zones, etc.
  • land on which farm buildings are located including, farm houses, barns, lanes, etc.

Question 17

Cropland is land which has not been left in its natural state. It is workable land which is tilled either annually or periodically to produce agricultural products. This includes field crops, land used to produce fruits and vegetables, greenhouses, sod and nursery production, etc.

Cropland

Question 18

Cropland is land which has not been left in its natural state. It is workable land which is tilled either annually or periodically to produce agricultural products. This includes field crops, land used to produce fruits and vegetables, greenhouses, sod and nursery production, etc.

Market value is the most probable price an asset would bring in a competitive and open market under all conditions required for a fair sale, with buyer and seller each acting prudently and knowledgeably.

Sources for market value:

  • assessment on a property tax bill
  • estimate based on recent land sales in the area
  • if money has been borrowed from a lending institution, the real estate value has likely been estimated.

Question 19

Cropland rented from others is workable land that you rented in order to cultivate and produce agricultural products.

Include land rented for field crops, e.g., tame hay, wheat, canola, potatoes, sugar beets, land used to produce fruits and vegetables, greenhouses, sod and nursery production, etc.

Capital investments

Question 23

Capital investments are expenditures for long-term assets, generally expensed using capital cost allowance/depreciation. Although not depreciable, land and living things such as trees, shrubs and animals are capital investments.

Question 24

b) House construction or renovation includes construction of a new farmhouse or any renovations to the existing farmhouse.

f) Environmental protection include:

  • Buffer strips: strips of vegetation which protect natural areas (especially watercourses) from surrounding land uses
  • Windbreaks and shelterbelts: bands of trees and shrubs designed to shelter crops, livestock, soil and buildings and to control snow accumulation
  • Fences for waterways protection: fencing exclusively to restrict livestock from watercourses in order to prevent erosion and water contamination.

If this operation incurred expenses to create an environmental plan, these expenses should be reported as operating expenses.

i) Quota is an entitlement or right to sell or deliver a certain amount of an agricultural product. This pertains to six products: milk, table eggs, hatching eggs, chicken, turkey, and tobacco.

Capital sales

Question 26

Capital sales arise from the sale or trade-in of capital assets, such as machinery, land, buildings, breeding and replacement livestock, and quota. This is opposed to farm revenue, which is the sale of products produced on the farm, such as livestock or crops.

Question 27

Capital sales arise from the sale or trade-in of capital assets, such as machinery, land, buildings, breeding and replacement livestock, and quota. This is opposed to farm revenue, which is the sale of products produced on the farm, such as livestock or crops.

a) Where land and buildings have been foreclosed on or transferred to a lender, use best estimate of the market value of the property. This might be obtained from: an assessment on a property tax bill, an estimate based on recent land sales in the area, or if money has been borrowed from a lending institution, the real estate value has likely been estimated.

c) Quota is an entitlement or right to sell or deliver a certain amount of an agricultural product. This pertains to six products: milk, table eggs, hatching eggs, chicken, turkey, and tobacco.

d) Breeding and replacement livestock includes the value of breeding and replacement livestock sold, excluding culls. Culls are female or male breeding stocks that are no longer productive. Do not report culls sold for slaughter as a capital sale (this is considered revenue).

Farm assets of this operation

Question 28

Assets refer to all tangible and intangible items of value owned by this operation. They are the sum of current assets, breeding and replacement livestock, market livestock, machinery and equipment, quota, land and buildings, and financial investments.

Please report market value — the most probable price an asset would bring in a competitive and open market under all conditions required for a fair sale, with buyer and seller each acting prudently and knowledgeably. If the exact market value is unknown, please give the best estimation.

Short-term farm assets are cash and any other asset that, in the normal course of operations, is expected to be converted into cash or consumed in the production process within one year or within the normal operating cycle (where the cycle is longer than a year).

a) Accounts receivable are monies which are owed to the operation usually arising from the sale of goods or services, such as crops, livestock or custom work, and from program payments, to be paid to the operation within 12 months. If the money is to be repaid after 12 months or over a series of years, it is considered a long-term note receivable and should be reported as "other long-term farm assets" (section "j").

b) Cash and short-term investments include surplus cash (usually arising from the sale of crops or livestock) which is invested for a short period of time until such time as the cash is again required in the farm business, usually to purchase new inputs such as fertilizer or feeder livestock. Included are certificates of deposits with a maturity of less than 12 months; if the maturity is 12 months or more, the amount should be reported as a "long-term investment" (section "I").

c) Inventory – Supplies on hand (inputs) refer to farm supplies that are to be used in the farm business. Crops for sale are not considered inputs and should be reported as "crops for sale" (section "d").

d) Inventory – Crops for sale include all harvested crops destined for market and greenhouse and nursery horticulture products for market.

e) Other short-term farm assets includes notes receivable, which are claims issued as evidence of debt e.g., promissory note. Only report here the amount expected to be repaid within 12 months. Amounts to be repaid after 12 months should be reported as "other long-term farm assets" (section "j").

Long-term farm assets have a useful life of greater than one year. Such an asset, which can be either a tangible or an intangible item, is usually not purchased for resale, but is to be used over time to produce saleable products.

f) Sources for the market value of farmland and buildings:

  • assessment on a property tax bill
  • estimate based on recent sales in the area
  • if money has been borrowed from a lending institution, the real estate value has likely been estimated.

h) Quota is the right to sell an agricultural product such as milk, poultry, eggs and tobacco. A quota can be a separate asset or can be attached to the land and buildings (poultry).

Quota has a market value and is considered an asset. Please ensure that the market value of quota is reported e.g., what the operation would have been able to sell its quota for on this operation's fiscal year-end date. It may help to multiply quota per animal by the number of animals owned by the operation on this operation's fiscal year-end date.

j) Other long-term farm assets include:

  • drying facilities
  • grocery store, shop or market, or fruit stand owned by this operation
  • long-term greenhouse and nursery products such as trees and shrubs
  • onion/potato/carrot/apple storage
  • rental unit / rental property owned by this operation
  • retail business owned by this operation (not including distinct companies)
  • sawmills
  • notes receivable expected to be repaid after 12 months.

Livestock and poultry assets

k) Breeding and replacement livestock are animals that are expected to be on the operation for more than one year – animals acquired or raised for the production of progeny, or for the production of a livestock product.

l) Market livestock are animals that are expected to be on the operation for less than one year. Include all poultry as market livestock.

Farm debt outstanding

Question 30

a) Money owed to banks, caisses populaires, credit unions, trust companies, treasury branches or credit card debt

  • Short-term includes balances on operating lines of credit, short-term loans, credit card balances, cash advances, and any overdue payments. Also include short-term loans guaranteed by governments but obtained through a financial institution
  • Long-term includes mortgages and long-term loans. Also include long-term loans guaranteed by governments but obtained through a financial institution.

Financière agricole du Québec is considered a financial institution and amounts owed to it should be reported here.

c) Money owed to the Advance Payments Program (APP)

The APP provides cash advances (up to $250,000) guaranteed by Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada (AAFC). Some APP loans may have 18-month repayment periods, however, for this survey, please record all money owed to APP as short-term debt.

Please record loans from the Commodity Loan Program (CLP) from the Agricultural Credit Corporation (ACC) here as well (Ontario only).

d) Money owed to machinery and supply companies or feed companies

Debts which are owed for the purchase of inputs, also referred to as accounts payable.

Include seed grain (input), fertilizer (input), feed (input), fuel for machinery, heating fuel, propane, purchase of vehicles or agricultural equipment financed by the dealer, monies owed to poultry suppliers (breeder-hatcheries or breed flock operations).

e) Money owed to family members, shareholders, or private individuals

Include parents, spouse, siblings, parent company, previous owner of the operation, another farm, e.g., for land rental or custom work, in-laws, sister company.

f) Amount of money owed to government agencies

Include farm loan board, agricultural credit / lending agencies.

Exclude:

  • deferred taxes
  • loans guaranteed by provincial governments or agencies, e.g., Investissement Québec, should be reported as debts to banks, caisses populaires, credit unions, trust companies or treasury branches).

g and h) All other short or long-term debt

Include:

  • accounts payable (other than to machinery and supply companies or feed companies)
  • agricultural co-operative
  • business Development Bank of Canada
  • Canadian Mortgage & Housing Corporation
  • freight bill
  • income tax to be paid (provincial and federal)
  • meat packing plant / abattoir
  • over-payment or claw-back, e.g., if the government asks for a portion of a previous payment to be repaid to them
  • property tax
  • public utilities, e.g., electricity or telephone
  • Société d'aide au développement des collectivités (SADC)
  • other (enter in comments).

Exclude amounts to be paid for:

  • leased vehicles or agricultural equipment
  • accounts payable to machinery and supply companies or feed companies.

Question 31

Loans guaranteed by provincial governments or agencies, e.g., Financière agricole du Québec and Investissement Québec, should be reported with the institutions (banks, caisses populaires, credit unions, trust companies or treasury branches) which disbursed the loans and not as government loans.

AgriInvest

Question 32, 34, 35, 37, 38

AgriInvest is a self-managed producer-government savings account that allows producers to set money aside which can be used to recover from small income shortfalls, or to make investments to reduce on-farm risks.

Program payments and insurance

Question 39

The Advance Payments Program (APP) is a federal loan guarantee program which provides agricultural producers with easy access to low-interest cash advances.

Question 40

AgriInsurance (also known as provincial crop or production insurance) is a federal-provincial-producer cost-shared program that stabilizes a producer's income by minimizing the economic effects of production losses caused by natural hazards. AgriInsurance is a provincially delivered program.

Question 41

AgriStability provides support when you experience a large margin decline. You may be able to receive an AgriStability payment when your current year program margin falls below 70% of your reference margin.

Question 42

Reference margin is the average program margin (allowable income minus allowable expenses) for three of the past five years (the lowest and highest margins are dropped from the calculation). The reference margin will be limited to the lower of the historical reference margin or the average allowable expenses for the years used to calculate the reference margin.

Questions 43 and 44

AgriStability provides support when you experience a large margin decline. You may be able to receive an AgriStability payment when your current year program margin falls below 70% of your reference margin.

Custom or contract feeding

Question 45

Report the total number of livestock fed for the whole year.

Include custom or contract grazing.

Exclude animals owned by this operation.

Question 46

Custom or contract feeding is where livestock or poultry are fed and raised by the operation for somebody else.

Include revenue received for the total number of livestock and poultry custom or contract fed for the whole year.

Question 48

Please report for all cycles of livestock and poultry custom or contract fed. For example, a broiler producer could have five cycles of 10,000 broilers in the barns in one year. In this case, report the total number of broilers for the year (10,000 broilers X 5 cycles = 50,000).

Wages and salaries

Question 51

Dividends paid by a farm corporation to its owners are not farm operating expenses like wages and salaries. Dividends are paid after tax, while wages and salaries are deducted before tax.

Question 52

Wages and salaries paid to family

The operator's family is defined as an operator, an operator's spouse or common-law partner and children residing in the same dwelling. Children are included regardless of age or marital status as long as they do not have their own spouse, common-law partner or child living in the same dwelling.

Include children studying away from the home whose main address is still the farm address.

Exclude:

  • operator's parents
  • operator's siblings
  • operator's family members residing in a different dwelling on the farm land.

Farm operating revenue and expenses

Question 53

With the respondent's consent, the following data (18 questions) will be obtained from the Canada Revenue Agency and shared with AAFC and your provincial ministry of agriculture:

  • Total gross farm revenue in 2017
  • The gross farm revenue in 2017 from the following:
    • sale of grains, oilseeds, pulse crops and forage seeds
    • sale of horticulture products
    • sale of cattle
    • sale of pigs
    • sale of poultry
    • sale of milk, cream and other dairy products
    • agriculture custom of contract work or machine rentals
    • all other farm revenue
    • total amount received for program payments.
  • Total farm operating expenses in 2017
  • The operating expenses in 2017 for the following:
    • fertilizer and lime
    • herbicides, insecticides, fungicides, etc.
    • seed and plants
    • feed, supplements and hay
    • fuel for machinery, trucks and automobiles
    • total interest paid on farm debt
    • land rentals

Note: In the case of sharing data with provincial agriculture ministries, the data shared will be limited to information pertaining to farm operations within the jurisdiction of the province.

Question 54

The Canada Revenue Agency has a requirement that Statistics Canada keep a record of the name of the person who gave consent to share the farm operation's revenue and expenses data. As stated, your name will not be shared with Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada or your provincial agriculture agency.

Farm operating revenue

Question 55

Gross farm revenue represents the income received from the sale of agricultural commodities, as well as direct program payments made to support or subsidize the agriculture sector.

Please report the gross revenue before any deductions.

Question 56

g) All other farm revenue includes all farm revenue for this operation that does not fall into the other categories provided.

Include Patronage dividends - payments that a cooperative make to its members.

Agritourism - display gardens (flowers, herbs, etc.), food processing facilities, historical museums and displays, working farm/ranch, barn dances, corn mazes, corporate picnics, educational tours / workshops, entertainment/music, fairs, festivals, on-farm accommodations (guest ranch, picnic areas, restaurant, sugar shack, farm / ranch holidays), tours, retail sales, leisure/recreation (fishing, gardening, hiking, horseback riding, U-pick crops).

h) Total amount received for program payments represent payments from government agencies to farm operations in the form of rebates, subsidies and stabilization payments.

Farm operating expenses

Question 57

Operating expenses are the business costs, generating a cash outlay, incurred by farm operators for goods and services used in the production of agricultural commodities in the fiscal year.

Operating expenses are reported on the operation's income statement and normally includes both direct and indirect production costs.

Include veterinary fees, medicine and breeding fees, e.g., artificial insemination.

Question 58

  1. Fertilizer and lime expenses include all costs associated with the purchase of fertilizer and lime including spreading, if it is part of the cost.
  2. Include all farm expenditures for pesticides (herbicides, insecticides, fungicides, etc.). If the application of pesticides is part of the cost, it is also included.
  3. Seed and plants expenses include the value of seed and seedlings purchased by farmers through nurseries, elevators, seed houses, seed dealers and other farmers. The value of home-grown seed and the value of seed bought for resale are excluded. Seed cleaning and treatment costs are included if they are part of the purchase cost.
  4. Feed, supplements and hay purchased by farmers, including hay and straw costs. The value of home-grown feed is excluded.
  5. Fuel for machinery, trucks and automobiles expenses include petroleum, diesel oil and lubricants used for all types of machinery and equipment from tractors and combines to generators and irrigation pumps. Only the farm business share of automobiles and trucks is included.
  6. Total interest paid on farm debt loans such as mortgages or credit from suppliers and private individuals.
  7. Land rentals includes all land rented for cash, from others including land rented from governments and other sources.

Financial information for sources other than this operation

Question 59

The operator's family is defined as an operator, an operator's spouse or common-law partner and children residing in the same dwelling. Children are included regardless of age or marital status as long as they do not have their own spouse, common-law partner or child living in the same dwelling.

Include children studying away from the home whose main address is still the farm address.

Exclude:

  • operator's parents
  • operator's siblings
  • operator's family members residing in a different dwelling on the farm land.

a) Employment Income

Include the amount of money for the gross wages and salaries (before deductions) for all family members. If an operator is involved in a second independent farm operation, the gross wages or salaries earned from that second farm should be reported here as well.

b) Net self-employment income

Business income includes income from any activity done for profit, for example, income from a service business. Exclude employment income as business income.

Professional fees are fees received for goods or services provided, whether money, something the same as money (such as credit units that have a notional monetary value), or something from bartering was received or will be received.

Fishing income includes income earned whether payable in cash, property or services from fishing for or catching shellfish, crustaceans or marine animals.

Fishing income does not include income earned from working as an employee in a fishing business.

f) Other examples of other income not from this operation include income from snow plowing or cutting weeds along a roadway.

Questions 60 and 61

The operator's family is defined as an operator, an operator's spouse or common-law partner and children residing in the same dwelling. Children are included regardless of age or marital status as long as they do not have their own spouse, common-law partner or child living in the same dwelling.

Include children studying away from the home whose main address is still the farm address.

Exclude:

  • operator's parents
  • operator's siblings
  • operator's family members residing in a different dwelling on the farm land

On-farm innovation

Question 62

If this operation has innovated, but has not yet seen the results, mark the question as "yes"; the impact of the innovation is not relevant to this question.

Innovation means implementing a new or significantly improved product, practice or process on your farming operation. Innovations must be new to your operation but need not be new to the industry.

Product innovation involves new or significantly improved crops produced, varieties planted, cultivars created, livestock types, and livestock breeds raised.

Production process and practice innovations involve new or significantly improved processes and/or practices regarding soil management, fertilizer application, irrigation and water management, and livestock handling.

Business management practice innovations involve new or significantly improved approaches to meeting labour requirements, business ownership and/or partnerships, acquiring inputs, and adding processing activities.

Marketing practice innovation involves new or significantly improved approaches to marketing the farm's production, such as marketing and/or production contracts, futures and/or options and direct marketing.

Questions 63 and 64

This question is not specific to an innovation that has already been implemented. Please reply whether or not this operation has implemented a new or significantly improved innovation.

Innovation means implementing a new or significantly improved product, practice or process on your farming operation.

Question 65

This question is not specific to an innovation that has already been implemented. Please reply whether or not this operation has implemented a new or significantly improved innovation.

Thank you for your participation.

Why do we conduct this survey?

This survey is conducted by Statistics Canada in order to collect the necessary information to support the Integrated Business Statistics Program (IBSP). This program combines various survey and administrative data to develop comprehensive measures of the Canadian economy.

The statistical information from the IBSP serves many purposes, including:

  • Obtaining information on the supply of, and/or demand for, energy in Canada
  • Enabling governmental agencies to fulfill their regulatory responsibilities in regards to public utilities
  • Enabling all levels of government to establish informed policies in the energy area
  • Assisting the business community in the corporate decision-making process.

Your information may also be used by Statistics Canada for other statistical and research purposes.

Your participation in this survey is required under the authority of the Statistics Act.

Other important information

Authorization to collect this information

Data are collected under the authority of the Statistics Act, Revised Statutes of Canada, 1985, Chapter S-19.

Confidentiality

By law, Statistics Canada is prohibited from releasing any information it collects that could identify any person, business, or organization, unless consent has been given by the respondent, or as permitted by the Statistics Act. Statistics Canada will use the information from this survey for statistical purposes only.

Record linkages

To enhance the data from this survey and to reduce respondent burden, Statistics Canada may combine it with information from other surveys or from administrative sources.

Data-sharing agreements

To reduce respondent burden, Statistics Canada has entered into data-sharing agreements with provincial and territorial statistical agencies and other government organizations, which have agreed to keep the data confidential and use them only for statistical purposes. Statistics Canada will only share data from this survey with those organizations that have demonstrated a requirement to use the data.

Section 11 of the Statistics Act provides for the sharing of information with provincial and territorial statistical agencies that meet certain conditions. These agencies must have the legislative authority to collect the same information, on a mandatory basis, and the legislation must provide substantially the same provisions for confidentiality and penalties for disclosure of confidential information as the Statistics Act. Because these agencies have the legal authority to compel businesses to provide the same information, consent is not requested and businesses may not object to the sharing of the data.

For this survey, there are Section 11 agreements with the provincial and territorial statistical agencies of Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Quebec, Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, British Columbia, and the Yukon.The shared data will be limited to information pertaining to business establishments located within the jurisdiction of the respective province or territory.

Section 12 of the Statistics Act provides for the sharing of information with federal, provincial or territorial government organizations. Under Section 12, you may refuse to share your information with any of these organizations by writing a letter of objection to the Chief Statistician, specifying the organizations with which you do not want Statistics Canada to share your data and mailing it to the following address:

Chief Statistician of Canada
Statistics Canada
Attention of Director, Enterprise Statistics Division
150 Tunney's Pasture Driveway
Ottawa, Ontario
K1A 0T6

You may also contact us by email at statcan.esdhelpdesk-dsebureaudedepannage.statcan@statcan.gc.ca or by fax at 613-951-6583.

For this survey, there are Section 12 agreements with the statistical agencies of Prince Edward Island, Northwest Territories and Nunavut as well as with Newfoundland and Labrador Department of Natural Resources, Ministère de l'énergie et des ressources naturelles du Québec, Manitoba Department of Mineral Resources, Alberta Energy, British Columbia Ministry of Energy and Mines, British Columbia Ministry of Natural Gas Development, National Energy Board, Natural Resources Canada and Environment Canada

For agreements with provincial and territorial government organizations, the shared data will be limited to information pertaining to business establishments located within the jurisdiction of the respective province or territory.

Business or organization and contact information

1. Please verify or provide the business or organization's legal and operating name and correct where needed.

Note: Legal name modifications should only be done to correct a spelling error or typo.

Legal Name
The legal name is one recognized by law, thus it is the name liable for pursuit or for debts incurred by the business or organization. In the case of a corporation, it is the legal name as fixed by its charter or the statute by which the corporation was created.

Modifications to the legal name should only be done to correct a spelling error or typo.

To indicate a legal name of another legal entity you should instead indicate it in question 3 by selecting 'Not currently operational' and then choosing the applicable reason and providing the legal name of this other entity along with any other requested information.

Operating Name
The operating name is a name the business or organization is commonly known as if different from its legal name. The operating name is synonymous with trade name.

  • Legal name
  • Operating name (if applicable)

2. Please verify or provide the contact information of the designated business or organization contact person for this questionnaire and correct where needed.

Note: The designated contact person is the person who should receive this questionnaire. The designated contact person may not always be the one who actually completes the questionnaire.

  • First name
  • Last name
  • Title
  • Preferred language of communication
    • English
    • French
  • Mailing address (number and street)
  • City
  • Province, territory or state
  • Postal code or ZIP code
  • Country
    • Canada
    • United States
  • Email address
  • Telephone number (including area code)
  • Extension number (if applicable)
  • Fax number (including area code)

3. Please verify or provide the current operational status of the business or organization identified by the legal and operating name above.

  • Operational
  • Not currently operational

Why is this business or organization not currently operational?

  • Seasonal operations
    • When did this business or organization close for the season? Date
    • When does this business or organization expect to resume operations? Date
  • Ceased operations
    • When did this business or organization cease operations? Date
    • Why did this business or organization cease operations?
      • Bankruptcy
      • Liquidation
      • Dissolution
      • Other
        Specify the other reasons for ceased operations
  • Sold operations
    • When was this business or organization sold? Date
    • What is the legal name of the buyer?
  • Amalgamated with other businesses or organizations
    • When did this business or organization amalgamate? Date
    • What is the legal name of the resulting or continuing business or organization?
    • What are the legal names of the other amalgamated businesses or organizations?
  • Temporarily inactive but will re-open
    • When did this business or organization become temporarily inactive? Date
    • When does this business or organization expect to resume operations? Date
    • Why is this business or organization temporarily inactive?
  • No longer operating due to other reasons
    • When did this business or organization cease operations? Date
    • Why did this business or organization cease operations?

4. Please verify or provide the current main activity of the business or organization identified by the legal and operating name above.

Note: The described activity was assigned using the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS).

This question verifies the business or organization's current main activity as classified by the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). The North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) is an industry classification system developed by the statistical agencies of Canada, Mexico and the United States. Created against the background of the North American Free Trade Agreement, it is designed to provide common definitions of the industrial structure of the three countries and a common statistical framework to facilitate the analysis of the three economies. NAICS is based on supply-side or production-oriented principles, to ensure that industrial data, classified to NAICS, are suitable for the analysis of production-related issues such as industrial performance.

The target entity for which NAICS is designed are businesses and other organizations engaged in the production of goods and services. They include farms, incorporated and unincorporated businesses and government business enterprises. They also include government institutions and agencies engaged in the production of marketed and non-marketed services, as well as organizations such as professional associations and unions and charitable or non-profit organizations and the employees of households.

The associated NAICS should reflect those activities conducted by the business or organizational units targeted by this questionnaire only, as identified in the 'Answering this questionnaire' section and which can be identified by the specified legal and operating name. The main activity is the activity which most defines the targeted business or organization's main purpose or reason for existence. For a business or organization that is for-profit, it is normally the activity that generates the majority of the revenue for the entity.

The NAICS classification contains a limited number of activity classifications; the associated classification might be applicable for this business or organization even if it is not exactly how you would describe this business or organization's main activity.

Please note that any modifications to the main activity through your response to this question might not necessarily be reflected prior to the transmitting of subsequent questionnaires and as a result they may not contain this updated information.

The following is the detailed description including any applicable examples or exclusions for the classification currently associated with this business or organization.

Description and examples

  • This is the current main activity.
  • This is not the current main activity.

Please provide a brief but precise description of this business or organization's main activity.
e.g., breakfast cereal manufacturing, shoe store, software development

Main activity

5. You indicated that is not the current main activity. Was this business or organization's main activity ever classified as: ?

  • Yes
  • No

When did the main activity change? Date

6. Please search and select the industry classification code that best corresponds to this business or organization's main activity.

How to search:

  • if desired, you can filter the search results by first selecting this business or organization's activity sector
  • enter keywords or a brief description that best describes this business or organization main activity
  • press the Search button to search the database for an activity that best matches the keywords or description you provided
  • then select an activity from the list.

Select this business or organization's activity sector (optional)

  • Farming or logging operation
  • Construction company or general contractor
  • Manufacturer
  • Wholesaler
  • Retailer
  • Provider of passenger or freight transportation
  • Provider of investment, savings or insurance products
  • Real estate agency, real estate brokerage or leasing company
  • Provider of professional, scientific or technical services
  • Provider of health care or social services
  • Restaurant, bar, hotel, motel or other lodging establishment
  • Other sector

Enter keywords or a brief description, then press the Search button

7. You have indicated that the current main activity of this business or organization is: Main activity Are there any other activities that contribute significantly (at least 10%) to this business or organization's revenue?

  • Yes, there are other activities.
  • No, that is the only significant activity.

Please provide a brief but precise description of this business or organization's secondary activity.
e.g., breakfast cereal manufacturing, shoe store, software development

8. Approximately what percentage of this business or organization's revenue is generated by each of the following activities?

When precise figures are not available, please provide your best estimates.

Percentage of revenue
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  Percentage of revenue
Main activity  
Secondary activity  
All other activities  
Total percentage  

Sales by type of industrial consumers

1. To which types of industrial consumers did this business deliver natural gas?

Exclude quantities delivered to natural gas transmission pipelines, gas storage facilities and other gas distributors (including municipalities and co-ops).

Select all that apply.

Sales by type of industrial consumers

Electric power generation establishments
Include all sales to establishments primarily engaged in the generation of bulk electric power, by hydro-electric power, fossil fuel, nuclear or other processes. NAICS code 22111. Exclude establishments primarily engaged in transmitting and/or distributing electric power which should be reported at question 15, 'Other commercial and institutional establishments'.

Agriculture, hunting and trapping establishments
Include all sales to establishments with land holdings primarily engaged in agricultural, hunting and trapping activities, and also establishments primarily engaged in providing support activities. Included are activities such as mushroom growers, greenhouses, nurseries, floriculture production, aquaculture, harvesting of wild animals, game retreats and hunting preserves. NAICS codes 111, 112, 1142, 1151 and 1152.

Mining, oil and gas extraction establishments
Include all sales to establishments primarily engaged in: mining, beneficiating or otherwise preparing iron ores. NAICS code 21221; the exploration for and/or production of crude oil and natural gas, whether by conventional or non conventional methods. NAICS code 211; contract drilling operations for crude oil and natural gas as well as services incidental to oil and gas extraction. NAICS codes 213111 and 213118; mining activities other than iron mines, crude oil and natural gas extraction, and crude oil and natural gas support activities. This category includes metal mines, non metal mines, stone quarries, and sand and gravel pits. NAICS codes 212, 213117 and 213119 (except 21221).

Forestry, logging and support activity establishments
Include all sales to establishments primarily engaged in growing and harvesting timber, including those performing particular support activities related to logging and forestry. NAICS codes 113 and 1153.

Construction establishments
Include all sales to establishments primarily engaged in the construction of buildings, highways, dams etc., and those providing services to the construction industry. Also include special trade contractors primarily engaged in construction work in such specialties as plumbing, carpentry, painting, roofing, etc. NAICS code 23. Exclude any offsite transportation fuel use, which should be reported in road transportation.

Manufacturing establishments
Include all sales to establishments primarily engaged in the manufacturing of products. For example: food, textile, clothing, leather, plastics, rubber, paper, wood, furniture products, iron and steel mills, ferro-alloy, cold-rolled steel shape, steel foundries, alumina and aluminum production, non-ferrous metal smelting and refining, fabricated metal product, machinery, computer and electronic product, electrical equipment, appliance, component and transportation equipment, cement, petroleum and coal products, chemical pesticide and fertilizer.

  • Electric power generation establishments
  • Agriculture, hunting and trapping establishments
  • Mining, oil and gas extraction establishments
  • Forestry, logging and support activity establishments
  • Construction establishments
  • Manufacturing establishments
  • No direct deliveries to industrial consumers

Sales to industrial consumers for end-use

2. To which provinces and territories did this business deliver natural gas to industrial consumers?

Select all that apply.

  • Newfoundland and Labrador
  • Prince Edward Island
  • Nova Scotia
  • New Brunswick
  • Quebec
  • Ontario
  • Manitoba
  • Saskatchewan
  • Alberta
  • British Columbia
  • Yukon
  • Northwest Territories
  • Nunavut

3. What was the quantity in gigajoules (GJ) of natural gas delivered to electric power generation establishments?

Include all sales to establishments primarily engaged in the generation of bulk electric power, by hydro-electric power, fossil fuel, nuclear or other processes. NAICS code 22111. Exclude establishments primarily engaged in transmitting and/or distributing electric power which should be reported at question 15, 'Other commercial and institutional establishments'.

Quantity in gigajoules of natural gas delivered to electric power generation establishments
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  Quantity in GJ
Newfoundland and Labrador  
Prince Edward Island  
Nova Scotia  
New Brunswick  
Quebec  
Ontario  
Manitoba  
Saskatchewan  
Alberta  
British Columbia  
Yukon  
Northwest Territories  
Nunavut  
Total quantity of natural gas delivered to electric power generation establishments  

4. What was the quantity in gigajoules (GJ) of natural gas delivered to agriculture, hunting and trapping establishments?

Include all sales to establishments with land holdings primarily engaged in agricultural, hunting and trapping activities, and also establishments primarily engaged in providing support activities. Included are activities such as mushroom growers, greenhouses, nurseries, floriculture production, aquaculture, harvesting of wild animals, game retreats and hunting preserves. NAICS codes 111, 112, 1142, 1151 and 1152.

Quantity in gigajoules of natural gas delivered to agriculture, hunting and trapping establishments
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  Quantity in GJ
Newfoundland and Labrador  
Prince Edward Island  
Nova Scotia  
New Brunswick  
Quebec  
Ontario  
Manitoba  
Saskatchewan  
Alberta  
British Columbia  
Yukon  
Northwest Territories  
Nunavut  
Total quantity of natural gas delivered to agriculture, hunting and trapping establishments  

5. What was the quantity in gigajoules (GJ) of natural gas delivered to mining, oil and gas extraction establishments?

Include all sales to establishments primarily engaged in: mining, beneficiating or otherwise preparing iron ores. NAICS code 21221; the exploration for and/or production of crude oil and natural gas, whether by conventional or non conventional methods. NAICS code 211; contract drilling operations for crude oil and natural gas as well as services incidental to oil and gas extraction. NAICS codes 213111 and 213118; mining activities other than iron mines, crude oil and natural gas extraction, and crude oil and natural gas support activities. This category includes metal mines, non metal mines, stone quarries, and sand and gravel pits. NAICS codes 212, 213117 and 213119 (except 21221).

Quantity in gigajoules of natural gas delivered to mining, oil and gas extraction establishments
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  Quantity in GJ
Newfoundland and Labrador  
Prince Edward Island  
Nova Scotia  
New Brunswick  
Quebec  
Ontario  
Manitoba  
Saskatchewan  
Alberta  
British Columbia  
Yukon  
Northwest Territories  
Nunavut  
Total quantity of natural gas delivered to mining, oil and gas extraction establishments  

6. What was the quantity in gigajoules (GJ) of natural gas delivered to forestry, logging and support activity establishments?

Forestry, logging and support activity establishments

Include all sales to establishments primarily engaged in growing and harvesting timber, including those performing particular support activities related to logging and forestry. NAICS codes 113 and 1153.

Quantity in gigajoules of natural gas delivered to forestry, logging and support activity establishments
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  Quantity in GJ
Newfoundland and Labrador  
Prince Edward Island  
Nova Scotia  
New Brunswick  
Quebec  
Ontario  
Manitoba  
Saskatchewan  
Alberta  
British Columbia  
Yukon  
Northwest Territories  
Nunavut  
Total quantity of natural gas delivered to forestry, logging and support activity establishments  

7. What was the quantity in gigajoules (GJ) of natural gas delivered to construction establishments?

Construction establishments:

Include all sales to establishments primarily engaged in the construction of buildings, highways, dams etc., and those providing services to the construction industry. Also include special trade contractors primarily engaged in construction work in such specialties as plumbing, carpentry, painting, roofing, etc. NAICS code 23.

Exclude any offsite transportation fuel use, which should be reported in road transportation.

Quantity in gigajoules of natural gas delivered to construction establishments
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  Quantity in GJ
Newfoundland and Labrador  
Prince Edward Island  
Nova Scotia  
New Brunswick  
Quebec  
Ontario  
Manitoba  
Saskatchewan  
Alberta  
British Columbia  
Yukon  
Northwest Territories  
Nunavut  
Total quantity of natural gas delivered to construction establishments  

8. What was the quantity in gigajoules (GJ) of natural gas delivered to manufacturing establishments?

Include all sales to establishments primarily engaged in the manufacturing of products. For example: food, textile, clothing, leather, plastics, rubber, paper, wood, furniture products, iron and steel mills, ferro-alloy, cold-rolled steel shape, steel foundries, alumina and aluminum production, non-ferrous metal smelting and refining, fabricated metal product, machinery, computer and electronic product, electrical equipment, appliance, component and transportation equipment, cement, petroleum and coal products, chemical pesticide and fertilizer.

Quantity in gigajoules of natural gas delivered to manufacturing establishments
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  Quantity in GJ
Newfoundland and Labrador  
Prince Edward Island  
Nova Scotia  
New Brunswick  
Quebec  
Ontario  
Manitoba  
Saskatchewan  
Alberta  
British Columbia  
Yukon  
Northwest Territories  
Nunavut  
Total quantity of natural gas delivered to manufacturing establishments  

Sales to commercial consumers for end-use

9. To which types of commercial consumers did this business deliver natural gas?

Select "No direct deliveries to commercial consumers", if this business did not directly deliver natural gas to any of the industries listed.

Exclude:

  • quantities delivered to natural gas transmission pipelines for further distribution.
  • quantities delivered to gas storage facilities and other gas distributors (including municipalities and co-ops).

Select all that apply.

Sales to commercial consumers for end-use

Road transportation establishments
Include all sales to establishments primarily engaged in the truck transportation of goods, transit and ground passenger transportation (urban transit systems, interurban and rural bus transportation, taxi and limousine services, school and employee bus transportation, charter bus industry, limousine services to airports and stations, shuttle services and special needs transportation), scenic and sightseeing transportation, and support activities for road transportation. Include establishments primarily providing specialized services to this category, such as freight forwarders, marine shipping agents and customs brokers. NAICS codes 484, 485, 4871, 4879, 4884-4889. Fuels used for heating and cooling buildings and offices should be reported at question 15, 'Other commercial and institutional establishments'.

Retail pump establishments
Include all sales to establishments engaged in retailing motor fuels to the general public by means of retail pumps (including marinas), irrespective of the type of ownership or operation. Establishments that operate gasoline stations on behalf of their owners and receive a commission on the sale of fuels are also included. NAICS code 447. Fuels used for heating and cooling buildings and offices should be reported at question 15, 'Other commercial and institutional establishments'.

Pipeline transportation establishments
Include all sales to establishments primarily engaged in operating pipelines for the transport of natural gas, crude oil and other products. Also included are establishments engaged in the distribution of natural gas through a system of mains. This category covers codes 486 and 2212. Fuels used for heating and cooling buildings and offices should be reported at question 15, 'Other commercial and institutional establishments'.

Public administration establishments
Include all sales to establishments of federal, provincial and municipal governments primarily engaged in activities associated with public administration. This includes such establishments as the Federal Public Service, the Department of National Defence, Royal Canadian Mounted Police and provincial and local administrations. This category covers NAICS code 91.

Other commercial and institutional establishments
Include all sales to establishments which are primarily engaged in other activities not previously specified.

  • Water transportation: Include all sales made to establishments primarily engaged in the water transportation of passengers and goods, using equipment designed for those purposes and provided by ships. Commercial fishing is also included. NAICS codes 1141, 483, 4872 and 4883.
  • Warehousing and storage: Include all sales to establishments primarily engaged in operating general merchandise, refrigerated and other warehousing and storage facilities. NAICS code 493.
  • Wholesale and retail trade: The wholesale sector comprises establishments primarily engaged in wholesaling merchandise and providing related logistics, marketing and support services. The retail sector comprises establishments primarily engaged in retailing merchandise, generally without transformation, and rendering services incidental to the sale of merchandise. NAICS codes 41, 44 and 45.
  • Education, health care and social assistance: Educational services comprise all sales to establishments primarily engaged in providing instruction and training in a wide variety of subjects. The health care and social assistance sector comprises all sales to establishments primarily engaged in providing health care by diagnosis and treatment, providing residential care for medical and social reasons and providing social assistance. NAICS codes 61 and 62.
  • Accommodation and food services: Include all sales to establishments primarily engaged in operating accommodation facilities, restaurants, take-out food and catering services, taverns, night clubs and bars. NAICS code 72.
  • Water, Sewage and Other Systems, NAICS code 2213; Postal Service, NAICS code 491; Couriers and Messengers, NAICS code 92; Information and Cultural Industries, NAICS code 51; Finance and Insurance, NAICS code 52; Real Estate, Rental and Leasing, NAICS code 53; Professional, Scientific and Technical Services, NAICS code 54; Management of Companies and Enterprises, NAICS code 55; Administrative and Support, Waste Management and Remediation Services, NAICS code 56; Arts, Entertainment and Recreation, NAICS code 71; Other Services (except Public Administration), NAICS code 81.
  • Note: Exclude any offsite transportation fuel use, which should be included in question 11, 'Road transportation establishements'.
  • Road transportation establishments
  • Retail pump establishments
  • Pipeline transportation establishments
  • Include only natural gas used as fuel by the establishment.
  • Public administration establishments
  • Other commercial and institutional establishments
  • No direct deliveries to commercial consumers
    Select 'No direct deliveries to commercial consumers', if this business did not directly deliver natural gas to any of the industries listed.

10. To which provinces and territories did this business deliver natural gas to commercial consumers?

Select all that apply.

  • Newfoundland and Labrador
  • Prince Edward Island
  • Nova Scotia
  • New Brunswick
  • Quebec
  • Ontario
  • Manitoba
  • Saskatchewan
  • Alberta
  • British Columbia
  • Yukon
  • Northwest Territories
  • Nunavut

11. What was the quantity in gigajoules (GJ) of natural gas delivered to road transportation establishments?

Include all sales to establishments primarily engaged in the truck transportation of goods, transit and ground passenger transportation (urban transit systems, interurban and rural bus transportation, taxi and limousine services, school and employee bus transportation, charter bus industry, limousine services to airports and stations, shuttle services and special needs transportation), scenic and sightseeing transportation, and support activities for road transportation. Include establishments primarily providing specialized services to this category, such as freight forwarders, marine shipping agents and customs brokers. NAICS codes 484, 485, 4871, 4879, 4884-4889. Fuels used for heating and cooling buildings and offices should be reported at question 15, 'Other commercial and institutional establishments'.

Quantity in gigajoules of natural gas delivered to road transportation establishments
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  Quantity in GJ
Newfoundland and Labrador  
Prince Edward Island  
Nova Scotia  
New Brunswick  
Quebec  
Ontario  
Manitoba  
Saskatchewan  
Alberta  
British Columbia  
Yukon  
Northwest Territories  
Nunavut  
Total quantity of natural gas delivered to road transportation establishments  

12. What was the quantity in gigajoules (GJ) of natural gas delivered to retail pump establishments?

Include all sales to establishments engaged in retailing motor fuels to the general public by means of retail pumps (including marinas), irrespective of the type of ownership or operation. Establishments that operate gasoline stations on behalf of their owners and receive a commission on the sale of fuels are also included. NAICS code 447. Fuels used for heating and cooling buildings and offices should be reported at question 15, 'Other commercial and institutional establishments'.

Quantity in gigajoules of natural gas delivered to retail pump establishments
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  Quantity in GJ
Newfoundland and Labrador  
Prince Edward Island  
Nova Scotia  
New Brunswick  
Quebec  
Ontario  
Manitoba  
Saskatchewan  
Alberta  
British Columbia  
Yukon  
Northwest Territories  
Nunavut  
Total quantity of natural gas delivered to retail pump establishments  

13. What was the quantity in gigajoules (GJ) of natural gas delivered to pipeline transportation establishments?

Include all sales to establishments primarily engaged in operating pipelines for the transport of natural gas, crude oil and other products. Also included are establishments engaged in the distribution of natural gas through a system of mains. This category covers codes 486 and 2212. Fuels used for heating and cooling buildings and offices should be reported at question 15, 'Other commercial and institutional establishments'.

Quantity in gigajoules of natural gas delivered to pipeline transportation establishments
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  Quantity in GJ
Newfoundland and Labrador  
Prince Edward Island  
Nova Scotia  
New Brunswick  
Quebec  
Ontario  
Manitoba  
Saskatchewan  
Alberta  
British Columbia  
Yukon  
Northwest Territories  
Nunavut  
Total quantity of natural gas delivered to pipeline transportation establishments  

14. What was the quantity in gigajoules (GJ) of natural gas delivered to public administration establishments?

Include all sales to establishments of federal, provincial and municipal governments primarily engaged in activities associated with public administration. This includes such establishments as the Federal Public Service, the Department of National Defence, Royal Canadian Mounted Police and provincial and local administrations. This category covers NAICS code 91.

Quantity in gigajoules of natural gas delivered to public administration establishments
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  Quantity in GJ
Newfoundland and Labrador  
Prince Edward Island  
Nova Scotia  
New Brunswick  
Quebec  
Ontario  
Manitoba  
Saskatchewan  
Alberta  
British Columbia  
Yukon  
Northwest Territories  
Nunavut  
Total quantity of natural gas delivered to public administration establishments  

15. What was the quantity in gigajoules (GJ) of natural gas delivered to other commercial and institutional establishments?

Include all sales to establishments which are primarily engaged in other activities not previously specified.

  • Water transportation: Include all sales made to establishments primarily engaged in the water transportation of passengers and goods, using equipment designed for those purposes and provided by ships. Commercial fishing is also included. NAICS codes 1141, 483, 4872 and 4883.
  • Warehousing and storage: Include all sales to establishments primarily engaged in operating general merchandise, refrigerated and other warehousing and storage facilities. NAICS code 493.
  • Wholesale and retail trade: The wholesale sector comprises establishments primarily engaged in wholesaling merchandise and providing related logistics, marketing and support services. The retail sector comprises establishments primarily engaged in retailing merchandise, generally without transformation, and rendering services incidental to the sale of merchandise. NAICS codes 41, 44 and 45.
  • Education, health care and social assistance: Educational services comprise all sales to establishments primarily engaged in providing instruction and training in a wide variety of subjects. The health care and social assistance sector comprises all sales to establishments primarily engaged in providing health care by diagnosis and treatment, providing residential care for medical and social reasons and providing social assistance. NAICS codes 61 and 62.
  • Accommodation and food services: Include all sales to establishments primarily engaged in operating accommodation facilities, restaurants, take-out food and catering services, taverns, night clubs and bars. NAICS code 72.
  • Water, Sewage and Other Systems, NAICS code 2213; Postal Service, NAICS code 491; Couriers and Messengers, NAICS code 92; Information and Cultural Industries, NAICS code 51; Finance and Insurance, NAICS code 52; Real Estate, Rental and Leasing, NAICS code 53; Professional, Scientific and Technical Services, NAICS code 54; Management of Companies and Enterprises, NAICS code 55; Administrative and Support, Waste Management and Remediation Services, NAICS code 56; Arts, Entertainment and Recreation, NAICS code 71; Other Services (except Public Administration), NAICS code 81.
  • Note: Exclude any offsite transportation fuel use, which should be included in question 11, 'Road transportation establishements'.
Quantity in gigajoules of natural gas delivered to other commercial and institutional establishments
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  Quantity in GJ
Newfoundland and Labrador  
Prince Edward Island  
Nova Scotia  
New Brunswick  
Quebec  
Ontario  
Manitoba  
Saskatchewan  
Alberta  
British Columbia  
Yukon  
Northwest Territories  
Nunavut  
Total quantity of natural gas delivered to other commercial and institutional establishments  

Sales to residential consumers for end-use

16. Did this business deliver natural gas directly to residential consumers?

Include: single residential meter service (i.e., single family dwelling) and bulk residential meter service (i.e., apartments, condominiums).

Exclude: quantities delivered to natural gas transmission pipelines, gas storage facilities and other gas distributors (including municipalities and co-ops).

Sales to residential consumers for end-use

  • Yes
  • No

17. To which province and territory did this business sell natural gas to residential consumers?

Select all that apply.

  • Newfoundland and Labrador
  • Prince Edward Island
  • Nova Scotia
  • New Brunswick
  • Quebec
  • Ontario
  • Manitoba
  • Saskatchewan
  • Alberta
  • British Columbia
  • Yukon
  • Northwest Territories
  • Nunavut

18. What was the quantity in gigajoules (GJ) of natural gas delivered to residential consumers?

Include all sales destined to be used in a single residential meter service (i.e., single family dwelling) or bulk residential metering service (i.e., apartments, condominiums).

Quantity in gigajoules of natural gas delivered to residential consumers
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  Quantity in GJ
Newfoundland and Labrador  
Prince Edward Island  
Nova Scotia  
New Brunswick  
Quebec  
Ontario  
Manitoba  
Saskatchewan  
Alberta  
British Columbia  
Yukon  
Northwest Territories  
Nunavut  
Total quantity of natural gas delivered to residential consumers  

Heat value of delivered natural gas

19. What was the average heating value of delivered natural gas in gigajoules per thousand cubic metres (GJ per 103m3)?

Heat value of delivered natural gas

Average heating value in gigajoules per thousand cubic metres: Report average heat content of your total natural gas disposition for the 2016 calendar year.

Value in GJ per 10³m³

Changes or events

20. Indicate any changes or events that affected the reported values for this business or organization, compared with the last reporting period.

Select all that apply.

  • Strike or lock-out
  • Exchange rate impact
  • Price changes in goods or services sold
  • Contracting out
  • Organisational change
  • Price changes in labour or raw materials
  • Natural disaster
  • Recession
  • Change in product line
  • Sold business units
  • Expansion
  • New/lost contract
  • Plant closures
  • Acquisition of business units
  • Other
    Specify the other changes or events
  • No changes or events

Contact person

21. Statistics Canada may need to contact the person who completed this questionnaire for further information. Is [Provided Given Name] [Provided Family Name] the best person to contact?

  • Yes
  • No

Who is the best person to contact about this questionnaire?

  • First name
  • Last name
  • Title
  • Email address
  • Telephone number (including area code)
  • Extension number (if applicable) The maximum number of characters is 5.
  • Fax number (including area code)

Feedback

22. How long did it take to complete this questionnaire?

Include the time spent gathering the necessary information.

  • Hours
  • Minutes

23. We invite your comments about this questionnaire.

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