Requests for information – Environment

Under the authority of the Statistics Act, Statistics Canada is hereby requesting the following information, which will be used solely for statistical and research purposes and will be protected in accordance with the provisions of the Statistics Act and any other applicable law. This is a mandatory request for data.

Natural disasters

Flood Hazard Model Data

What information is being requested?

Aggregate flood hazard model data (percentage of land area covered by 100-year floodplain) at the dissemination block level for Census Metropolitan Areas (CMAs) or Census Agglomerations (CAs) in Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Ontario and British Columbia, possibly to expand to other provinces.  

What personal information is included in this request?

This request does not contain any personal information.

What years of data will be requested?

2022 and ongoing.

From whom will the information be requested?

Public Safety Canada

Why is this information being requested?

Statistics Canada requires this information to develop new data and analysis on climate change, flood hazard and housing, by identifying and assessing the characteristics of residential properties that are in flood prone areas.

The data and analysis will help users better understand climate change impacts on housing markets and will be used by policy makers, researchers, and industry stakeholders to inform policy on land use, zoning regulations and infrastructure development. 

Statistics Canada may also use the information for other statistical and research purposes. 

Why were these organizations selected as data providers?

This organization collects and maintains data on flood models based on 100-year floodplain. 

When will this information be requested?

June 2024

What Statistics Canada programs will primarily use these data?

When was this request published?

 

Environmental protection

Environmental protection expenditures

What information is being requested?

The requested data provides information on environmental protection expenditures; environmental and clean technology goods and services purchased; and, adopted environmental management practices in the wood product and paper manufacturing industry. The data requested includes business names and addresses.

What personal information is included in this request?

No personal information is being requested.

What years of data will be requested?

Annual data starting from 2018 (ongoing)

From whom will the information be requested?

Forest Products Association of Canada (FPAC)

Why is this information being requested?

Statistics Canada will use this data to produce statistics on environmental protection costs and clean technology use in the Annual Environment Protection Expenditures Survey. The data will help inform public policy on the Clean Technology Data Strategy, among other environmental-related policies, and will be used by policy makers, researchers, industry stakeholders and Canadians to better understand the wood product and paper manufacturing industry's environmental protection activities and clean technology use. Statistics Canada may also use the data for other statistical and research purposes.

Why were these organizations selected as data providers?

The Forest Products Association of Canada collects and maintains up-to-date data on environmental protection expenditures; environmental and clean technology goods and services purchases; and, a list of the environmental management practices.

When will this information be requested?

December 2019 onwards

When was this request published?

November 15, 2019

This page was updated to include additional details related to the original request.

Why do we conduct this survey?

The purpose of this survey is to obtain information on the expenditures made by industry to protect the environment in Canada. This information serves as an important indicator of Canadian investment in environmental protection.

Data from this survey are used by all levels of government in establishing informed environmental policies. The private sector also uses this information 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 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 Natural Resources Canada; Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada; and the statistical agencies of Prince Edward Island, the Northwest Territories and Nunavut.

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. 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. 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)
  • The maximum number of characters is 10.
  • Fax number (including area code)

3. 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. 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

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
    When did the main activity change?
    Date
  • No

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

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

Solid waste management

1. Report this establishment's capital expenditures and operating expenses for non-hazardous and hazardous solid waste management during the 2018 fiscal year.

Include expenditures related to:

  • non-hazardous and hazardous solid waste collection, transport, treatment, storage, disposal, recycling, and composting
  • on-site preparation of materials for recycling at an off-site facility done by your establishment's employees and services provided by a private contractor or a federal, provincial or local government body
  • assessments and audits
  • activities related to measurement, control, laboratories
  • municipal services
  • both own-account expenses ( e.g., employee wages and salaries) and purchased goods and services.

Exclude expenditures on:

  • on-site recycling
  • sewage or wastewater management (to be reported in question 4)
  • treatment of high-level radioactive waste (to be reported in question 23).

To report operating expenses:

Include all expenses related to environmental protection incurred for labour, materials and supplies, maintenance and repair, and purchased services (include fuel and electricity expenses for machinery and equipment whose sole purpose is to protect the environment).

Exclude depreciation on machinery and equipment.

To report capital expenditures:

Include all relevant outlays for machinery and equipment and their installation and repair that have been capitalized, as well as for the construction of non-residential facilities (contractors or own employees). For construction, include all costs associated with demolition, planning and design (such as engineering and consulting fees), any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation and any costs associated with the purchase of land that are neither amortized nor depreciated.

Exclude any provisions for future environmental liability.

If the expenditure is zero or if not applicable, enter '0' in the corresponding box. When precise figures are not available, provide your best estimate.

Note: This survey requires all environmental protection expenditures to be reported, whether or not they are in response to current or anticipated Canadian or international regulations, conventions or voluntary agreements.

Solid waste management:

Activities related to the collection, treatment, storage, disposal, and recycling of all domestic, industrial, non-hazardous and hazardous waste (including low-level radioactive waste). Include monitoring and regulation activities, related environmental assessments and audits, costs for regular garbage collection and other related expenditures. Exclude radioactive waste requiring shielding during handling and transportation (to be reported under 'protection against radiation'.)

Waste:

Any material that is unwanted by its producer. The unwanted material may be a by-product of an extraction or production process, or products that have been consumed or lost their original inherent value from the perspective of the current holder ( e.g., an empty package, an apple core, or an old newspaper). Once it enters into the waste stream ( e.g., is picked up for collection by a waste service provider), materials that hold value to someone else may be diverted for further use ( e.g., the apple core could be composted, the old newspaper could be used as an input at a pulp and paper plant). Include both nonhazardous and hazardous wastes, including low-level radioactive waste. Exclude other radioactive waste (to be reported under protection against radiation).

Hazardous waste:

All materials that may be hazardous to human health or the environment, due to their nature or quantity, and which require special handling techniques as specified by the Transportation of Dangerous Goods Regulations (2001), the Canadian Environmental Protection Act (1999), The Basel Convention (1989), or the Export and Import of Hazardous Waste and Hazardous Recyclable Material Regulations (2005). For the purposes of this definition, hazardous waste includes low-level radioactive waste, but excludes other radioactive waste (to be reported under protection against radiation).

Low-level radioactive waste:

Waste that contains or is contaminated with radionuclides at a concentration or radioactivity level that is low enough that shielding is not required during normal handling and transportation.

Radioactive waste:

Any material that contains or is contaminated with radionuclides at concentration or radioactivity levels greater than the "exempt quantities" established by the competent authorities, and for which no use is foreseen. This includes wastes produced at nuclear power plants and associated nuclear fuel cycle facilities as well as through other uses of radioactive material ( e.g., the use of radionuclides in hospitals and research establishments). Other important wastes are those from mining and milling of uranium and from the reprocessing of spent fuel.

For mining activities:

Do not report any expenditures that are related to the handling and treatment of mine tailings under this category (to be reported under 'wastewater management').

Examples of related technologies:

Collection-related goods and technologies

  • Collection vehicles for waste, recycling and organics
  • Containers for collection of waste, recycling and organics
  • Other recycling equipment used in collection

Separating and sorting-related goods and technologies

  • Air classifiers, magnetic separators, eddy current separators, etc.

Compaction-related goods and technologies

  • Balers, densifiers, compactors, shredders, granulators, etc.

Centralized biological reprocessing technologies

  • Centralized composters, etc.

Disposal-related goods and technologies

  • Equipment for landfill leachate collection and containment
  • Equipment for landfill gas management
  • Equipment for thermal treatment ( e.g., rotary kiln incinerator, mass burning, starved air incinerator, fluidized bed)

To report operating expenses:

Include all expenses related to environmental protection incurred for labour, materials and supplies, maintenance and repair, and purchased services (include fuel and electricity expenses for machinery and equipment whose sole purpose is to protect the environment).

Exclude depreciation on machinery and equipment.

To report capital expenditures:

Include all relevant outlays for machinery and equipment and their installation and repair that have been capitalized, as well as for the construction of non-residential facilities (contractors or own employees). For construction, include all costs associated with demolition, planning and design (such as engineering and consulting fees), any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation and any costs associated with the purchase of land that are neither amortized nor depreciated.

Exclude any provisions for future environmental liability.

Environmental protection expenditures:

All operating expenses and capital and repair expenditures whose primary purpose is the prevention, reduction or elimination of pollution and/or other forms of degradation of the environment as well as measures taken to restore the environment from a degraded state. This includes expenditures that this specific establishment incurred for pollution prevention, abatement and control; solid waste management; wastewater management; protection and remediation of soil, groundwater and surface water; protection and restoration of biodiversity and habitat; environmental monitoring; environmental assessments and audits; relevant training and administrative costs, etc.

Exclude expenditures made to improve employee health, workplace safety, and site beautification. Expenses incurred to produce pollution prevention or abatement and control equipment for sale are also excluded as they would appear twice in the expenditure data produced by Statistics Canada. Expenditures for environment-related research and development are also excluded since they are collected elsewhere in Statistics Canada.

This is an example of a table, it contains no data
  CAN$
Capital expenditures  
Operating expenses  
Total expenditures  

2. Of the (Total expenditures reported in question 1), report the proportion spent on purchased goods, technologies and services.

Purchased goods, technologies and services are goods, technologies and services provided by an outside company or service provider. They exclude in-house or own-account expenditures, such as employee wages and salaries.

When precise figures are not available, provide your best estimate.

Percentage spent

3. Which of the following goods and technologies related to solid waste management were purchased by this establishment during the 2018 fiscal year?

Select all that apply.

  • Collection vehicles for waste, recycling and organics
  • Containers for collection of waste, recycling and organics
  • Other recycling equipment used in collection
  • Separating and sorting-related goods and technologies - e.g., air classifiers, magnetic separators, eddy current separators
  • Compaction-related goods and technologies - e.g., balers, densifiers, compactors, shredders, granulators
  • Centralized biological reprocessing technologies - e.g., centralized composters
  • Equipment for landfill leachate collection and containment
  • Equipment for landfill gas management
  • Equipment for thermal treatment - e.g., rotary kiln incinerator, mass burning, starved air incinerator, fluidized bed
  • Other solid waste management goods or technologies - Specify other solid waste management goods or technologies
  • None of the above

Wastewater management

4. Report this establishment's capital expenditures and operating expenses for wastewater management during the 2018 fiscal year.

Include expenditures related to:

  • prevention of wastewater through in-process modifications
  • wastewater treatment, including pollution abatement and control (end-of-pipe) processes
  • management of substances released to surface waters, municipal sewer systems, soil, or underground
  • treatment of cooling water for disposal
  • the installation of sewage infrastructure and expenditures related to the use, collection, treatment and disposal of sewage, including septic tanks
  • sewage services provided by a federal, provincial or local government body ( e.g., municipal services)
  • handling and treatment of mine tailings
  • assessments and audits
  • activities related to measurement, control, laboratories
  • both own-account expenses ( e.g., employee wages and salaries) and purchased goods and services.

Exclude expenditures on the protection of groundwater from pollutant infiltration and the cleaning up of soil and water bodies after pollution (to be reported in question 16).

If the expenditure is zero or if not applicable, enter '0' in the corresponding box. When precise figures are not available, provide your best estimate.

Note: This survey requires all environmental protection expenditures to be reported, whether or not they are in response to current or anticipated Canadian or international regulations, conventions or voluntary agreements.

Wastewater management:

Activities aimed at the abatement or prevention of pollution through the abatement of pollutants or reduction of the release of wastewater. For example, report on measures aimed at reducing pollutants before discharge, and at reducing the release of wastewater, fees paid to municipalities for municipal sewage services, costs associated with septic tanks, treatment of cooling water, handling and treatment of mine tailings, etc.

Wastewater:

Water that is of no further immediate value for the purpose for which it was used or in the pursuit of which it was produced, because of quality, quantity or time of its occurrence.

Sewage:

Wastewater discharged from residences, commercial and industrial establishments and conveyed in a plumbing collection system.

For mining activities:

Use this question to report any expenditures that are related to the handling and treatment of mine tailings to protect the environment, including those required by environmental regulation. Include all expenditures related to environmental protection, even when some of these activities are now considered to be "standard practice."

Examples of related technologies:

Physical or chemical treatment of industrial wastewater

  • Tanks and related components for dilution or equalization, neutralization, sedimentation, chemical precipitation
  • Oil separators, skimmers
  • Ion exchange beds
  • Air stripping tanks or columns
  • Liquid extraction columns
  • Micro-porous membrane adsorbers
  • Equipment for advanced chemical oxidation or UV radiation
  • Pre-treatment filters
  • Chemicals used in industrial wastewater treatment

Centralized physical or chemical and biological treatment of sewage

  • Intake screens
  • Air sparging grit chambers
  • Oil separators, skimmers
  • Tanks and related components for sedimentation, chemical precipitation or flocculation, aerobic biological treatment, aeration, clarification, disinfection
  • Membrane bioreactors
  • Trickling filters
  • Anaerobic digesters
  • Chemicals used in sewage treatment

To report operating expenses:

Include all expenses related to environmental protection incurred for labour, materials and supplies, maintenance and repair, and purchased services (include fuel and electricity expenses for machinery and equipment whose sole purpose is to protect the environment).

Exclude depreciation on machinery and equipment.

To report capital expenditures:

Include all relevant outlays for machinery and equipment and their installation and repair that have been capitalized, as well as for the construction of non-residential facilities (contractors or own employees). For construction, include all costs associated with demolition, planning and design (such as engineering and consulting fees), any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation and any costs associated with the purchase of land that are neither amortized nor depreciated.

Exclude any provisions for future environmental liability.

Environmental protection expenditures:

All operating expenses and capital and repair expenditures whose primary purpose is the prevention, reduction or elimination of pollution and/or other forms of degradation of the environment as well as measures taken to restore the environment from a degraded state. This includes expenditures that this specific establishment incurred for pollution prevention, abatement and control; solid waste management; wastewater management; protection and remediation of soil, groundwater and surface water; protection and restoration of biodiversity and habitat; environmental monitoring; environmental assessments and audits; relevant training and administrative costs, etc.

Exclude expenditures made to improve employee health, workplace safety, and site beautification. Expenses incurred to produce pollution prevention or abatement and control equipment for sale are also excluded as they would appear twice in the expenditure data produced by Statistics Canada. Expenditures for environment-related research and development are also excluded since they are collected elsewhere in Statistics Canada.

This is an example of a table, it contains no data
  CAN$
Capital expenditures  
Operating expenses  
Total expenditures  

5. Of the (Total expenditures reported in question 4), report the proportion spent on purchased goods, technologies and services.

Purchased goods, technologies and services are goods, technologies and services provided by an outside company or service provider. They exclude in-house or own-account expenditures, such as employee wages and salaries.

When precise figures are not available, provide your best estimate.

Percentage spent

Wastewater pollution abatement and control (end-of-pipe processes) is any method, technique, or process designed to manage and treat pollution after it is generated during the production process.

For example:

  • biological and chemical systems to treat water (such as water treatment plants)
  • filtration systems
  • cyclones
  • septic tanks, portable toilets
  • other barrier systems
  • treatment of cooling water before release.

Wastewater pollution prevention (integrated processes) is any method, technique, or process that reduces or eliminates the amount of pollution generated during the production process i.e., before pollution is created. Pollution prevention activities can include equipment and technology modifications.

For example:

  • product design or reformulation to be less toxic upon use, release or disposal
  • equipment or process modifications (integrated processes)
  • recirculation, on-site recycling or reuse or recovery of polluting substances
  • materials or feedstock substitution, solvent reduction, elimination or substitution
  • improved inventory management or purchasing techniques
  • prevention of leaks and spills of polluting substances
  • improved operating practices or pollution prevention training.

6. Of the reported for capital expenditures for wastewater management (question 4a), what proportion was spent on each of the following?

If the proportion is zero, enter '0' in the corresponding box. When precise figures are not available, provide your best estimate.

For both categories of wastewater management, exclude expenditures on the protection of groundwater from pollution infiltration and the cleaning up of soil and water bodies after pollution (to be reported under 'Protection and remediation of soil, groundwater and surface water').

Wastewater pollution abatement and control expenditures (end-of-pipe processes):

The purchase, operating and maintenance of equipment and processes that manage or treat wastewater after it has been created. End-of-pipe processes are not an integral part of production; their sole purpose is to abate or to control undesirable substances resulting from normal production. For example, the purchase or operation of:

  • Tanks and related components for dilution or equalization, neutralization, sedimentation, chemical precipitation
  • Oil separators, skimmers
  • Ion exchange beds
  • Air stripping tanks or columns
  • Micro-porous membrane adsorbers
  • Equipment for advanced chemical oxidation or UV radiation
  • Pre-treatment filters
  • Chemicals used in industrial wastewater treatment
  • All equipment used for the physical or chemical and biological treatment of sewage
  • Fees paid to municipalities or other organization for wastewater or sewage treatment

Wastewater pollution prevention expenditures (integrated processes):

The purchase, operation and maintenance of equipment and processes that reduce or eliminate wastewater pollution at the source, in other words, before pollution is created as opposed to an end-of-pipe process.

Examples of pollution prevention activities:

  • Product design or reformulation, such as changing product specifications to reduce or eliminate the use of toxic substances; modifying product design or composition to make them more environmentally friendly.
  • Equipment or process modifications (integrated process), such as instituting recycling within a process; switching from the use of solvents to mechanical paint-stripping devices; modifying or installing rinse systems; improving rinse equipment design; improving rinse equipment operation; modifying equipment, layout or piping; use of a different process catalyst.
  • Recirculation, on-site recycling or reuse or recovery of materials or substances, such as using a small distillation unit to reclaim solvents on-site; recovery of sludge; water recirculation; reuse of water for refrigeration condenser operation. Excludes materials transferred or recycled off-site.
  • Materials or feedstock substitution, solvent reduction, elimination or substitution, such as the use of aqueous-based rather than solvent-based cleaners; increased purity of raw materials.
  • Improved inventory management or purchasing techniques, such as avoiding the unnecessary generation of wastewater by ensuring that materials do not stay in inventory beyond shelf life; eliminating shelf-life requirements for stable materials; instituting better labelling procedures; instituting a clearinghouse to exchange materials that would otherwise be discarded as wastewater.
  • Prevention of leaks and spills, such as taking measures to prevent releases such as installing splash guards and drip trays around equipment; modifying containment procedures for cleaning units; improving draining procedures; improving storage or stacking procedures; improving procedures for loading, unloading and transfer operations; installing overflow alarms or automatic shut-off valves; implementing an inspection or monitoring program for potential spill or leak sources.
  • Good operating practices or pollution prevention training, such as changing production schedules to minimize equipment and feedstock changeovers; improving maintenance scheduling, record keeping or procedures; training staff to recognize and implement pollution prevention opportunities.

To report capital expenditures:

Include all relevant outlays for machinery and equipment and their installation and repair that have been capitalized, as well as for the construction of non-residential facilities (contractors or own employees). For construction, include all costs associated with demolition, planning and design (such as engineering and consulting fees), any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation and any costs associated with the purchase of land that are neither amortized nor depreciated.

Exclude any provisions for future environmental liability.

This is an example of a table, it contains no data
  Percentage
Pollution abatement and control for wastewater released to surface waters, municipal sewer systems or soil, or injected underground (end-of-pipe)  
Pollution prevention for wastewater released to surface waters, municipal sewer systems or soil, or injected underground (integrated processes)  
Total percentage  

7. Of the reported for operating expenses for wastewater management (question 4b), what proportion was spent on each of the following?

If the proportion is zero, enter '0' in the corresponding box. When precise figures are not available, provide your best estimate.

For both categories of wastewater management, exclude expenditures on the protection of groundwater from pollution infiltration and the cleaning up of soil and water bodies after pollution (to be reported under 'Protection and remediation of soil, groundwater and surface water').

Wastewater pollution abatement and control expenditures (end-of-pipe processes):

The purchase, operating and maintenance of equipment and processes that manage or treat wastewater after it has been created. End-of-pipe processes are not an integral part of production; their sole purpose is to abate or to control undesirable substances resulting from normal production. For example, the purchase or operation of:

  • Tanks and related components for dilution or equalization, neutralization, sedimentation, chemical precipitation
  • Oil separators, skimmers
  • Ion exchange beds
  • Air stripping tanks or columns
  • Micro-porous membrane adsorbers
  • Equipment for advanced chemical oxidation or UV radiation
  • Pre-treatment filters
  • Chemicals used in industrial wastewater treatment
  • All equipment used for the physical or chemical and biological treatment of sewage
  • Fees paid to municipalities or other organization for wastewater or sewage treatment

Wastewater pollution prevention expenditures (integrated processes):

The purchase, operation and maintenance of equipment and processes that reduce or eliminate wastewater pollution at the source in other words, before pollution is created as opposed to an end-of-pipe process.

Examples of pollution prevention activities:

  • Product design or reformulation, such as changing product specifications to reduce or eliminate the use of toxic substances; modifying product design or composition to make them more environmentally friendly.
  • Equipment or process modifications (integrated process), such as instituting recycling within a process; switching from the use of solvents to mechanical paint-stripping devices; modifying or installing rinse systems; improving rinse equipment design; improving rinse equipment operation; modifying equipment, layout or piping; use of a different process catalyst.
  • Recirculation, on-site recycling or reuse or recovery of materials or substances, such as using a small distillation unit to reclaim solvents on-site; recovery of sludge; water recirculation; reuse of water for refrigeration condenser operation. Excludes materials transferred or recycled off-site.
  • Materials or feedstock substitution, solvent reduction, elimination or substitution, such as the use of aqueous-based rather than solvent-based cleaners; increased purity of raw materials.
  • Improved inventory management or purchasing techniques, such as avoiding the unnecessary generation of wastewater by ensuring that materials do not stay in inventory beyond shelf life; eliminating shelf-life requirements for stable materials; instituting better labelling procedures; instituting a clearinghouse to exchange materials that would otherwise be discarded as wastewater.
  • Prevention of leaks and spills, such as taking measures to prevent releases such as installing splash guards and drip trays around equipment; modifying containment procedures for cleaning units; improving draining procedures; improving storage or stacking procedures; improving procedures for loading, unloading and transfer operations; installing overflow alarms or automatic shut-off valves; implementing an inspection or monitoring program for potential spill or leak sources.
  • Good operating practices or pollution prevention training, such as changing production schedules to minimize equipment and feedstock changeovers; improving maintenance scheduling, record keeping or procedures; training staff to recognize and implement pollution prevention opportunities.

To report operating expenses:

Include all expenses related to environmental protection incurred for labour, materials and supplies, maintenance and repair, and purchased services (include fuel and electricity expenses for machinery and equipment whose sole purpose is to protect the environment).

Exclude depreciation on machinery and equipment.

This is an example of a table, it contains no data
  Percentage
Pollution abatement and control for wastewater released to surface waters, municipal sewer systems or soil, or injected underground (end-of-pipe)  
Pollution prevention for wastewater released to surface waters, municipal sewer systems or soil, or injected underground (integrated processes)  
Total percentage  

8. Which of the following goods and technologies related to wastewater management were purchased by this establishment during the 2018 fiscal year?

Select all that apply.

  • Tanks and related components for dilution or equalization, neutralization, sedimentation, chemical precipitation
  • Oil separators, skimmers used in industrial wastewater
  • Oil separators, skimmers in sewage treatment
  • Ion exchange beds
  • Air stripping tanks or columns
  • Liquid extraction columns
  • Micro-porous membrane adsorbers
  • Equipment for advanced chemical oxidation or UV radiation
  • Pre-treatment filters
  • Chemicals used in industrial wastewater treatment
  • Chemicals used in sewage treatment
  • Intake screens
  • Air sparging grit chambers
  • Tanks and related components for sedimentation, chemical precipitation or flocculation, aerobic biological treatment, aeration, clarification, disinfection
  • Membrane bioreactors
  • Trickling filters
  • Anaerobic digesters
  • Other goods and technologies related to wastewater management - Specify other goods and technologies related to wastewater management
  • None of the above

Environmental protection

9. During the 2018 fiscal year, did this establishment have environmental protection expenditures in any of the following categories?

Include capital expenditures and operating expenses.

Report both own-account expenses ( e.g., employee wages and salaries) and purchased goods and services.

Please select either "Yes" or "No" for each type of expenditure. Please do not leave any question blank.

Note: This survey requires all environmental protection expenditures to be reported, whether or not they are in response to current or anticipated Canadian or international regulations, conventions or voluntary agreements.

Environmental protection expenditures:

All operating expenses and capital and repair expenditures whose primary purpose is the prevention, reduction or elimination of pollution and/or other forms of degradation of the environment as well as measures taken to restore the environment from a degraded state. This includes expenditures that this specific establishment incurred for pollution prevention, abatement and control; solid waste management; wastewater management; protection and remediation of soil, groundwater and surface water; protection and restoration of biodiversity and habitat; environmental monitoring; environmental assessments and audits; relevant training and administrative costs, etc.

Exclude expenditures made to improve employee health, workplace safety, and site beautification. Expenses incurred to produce pollution prevention or abatement and control equipment for sale are also excluded as they would appear twice in the expenditure data produced by Statistics Canada. Expenditures for environment-related research and development are also excluded since they are collected elsewhere in Statistics Canada.

To report operating expenses:

Include all expenses related to environmental protection incurred for labour, materials and supplies, maintenance and repair, and purchased services (include fuel and electricity expenses for machinery and equipment whose sole purpose is to protect the environment).

Exclude depreciation on machinery and equipment.

To report capital expenditures:

Include all relevant outlays for machinery and equipment and their installation and repair that have been capitalized, as well as for the construction of non-residential facilities (contractors or own employees). For construction, include all costs associated with demolition, planning and design (such as engineering and consulting fees), any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation and any costs associated with the purchase of land that are neither amortized nor depreciated.

Exclude any provisions for future environmental liability.

This is an example of a table, it contains no data
  Yes No
Air pollution management    
Protection and remediation of soil, groundwater and surface water    
Protection of biodiversity and habitat    
Noise and vibration abatement    
Protection against radiation    
Environmental charges    
Other environmental protection activities    

Air pollution management

10. Report this establishment's capital expenditures and operating expenses for air pollution management during the 2018 fiscal year.

Include expenditures related to:

  • the management of pollutant emissions to the atmosphere, including greenhouse gases
  • both pollution prevention (integrated processes) and pollution abatement and control (end-of-pipe processes)
  • assessments and audits
  • activities related to measurement, control, laboratories
  • both own-account expenses ( e.g., employee wages and salaries) and purchased goods and services.

Exclude expenditures related to:

  • workers' health and safety ( e.g., maintenance of indoor air quality)
  • measures undertaken for cost-saving reasons, such as heat or energy savings (to be reported in question 28a)
  • the purchase of electric or hybrid vehicles (to be reported in question 28b)
  • the production of renewable or clean energy (to be reported in questions 28c and 28e)
  • the purchase of biofuels (to be reported in question 28d)
  • the purchase of renewable energy (not included in this survey).

If the expenditure is zero, enter '0' in the corresponding box. When precise figures are not available, provide your best estimate.

Air pollution management:

Activities aimed at reducing the emissions of pollutants (including greenhouse gases) to the atmosphere, including pollution abatement and control ( i.e., end-of-pipe processes) and pollution prevention ( i.e., integrated processes), as well as related assessments, audits, measurement, control, laboratories and the like.

Examples of related technologies:

Physical or chemical treatment technologies

  • Filters and cyclones
  • Electrostatic precipitators
  • Scrubbers
  • Waste gas absorbers and waste gas flare or incinerators
  • Industrial catalytic converters
  • Pollutant recovery condensers
  • Adsorbers

Greenhouse gas control technologies

  • Clean coal processing technologies
  • Carbon capture and sequestration technologies and storage
  • Air and off-gas treatments

Air quality and air pollution technologies

  • Low emitting burners

Monitoring and compliance technologies

  • Leak detection technologies
  • Environmental measurement apparatus

Examples of related services:

Greenhouse gas management services

  • Services for carbon credit trading, generation of compliance units, surplus allowances, emissions performance credits, and offset credits
  • Preparation of emissions reports and verification services
  • Allowance auctioning and exchange platform services
  • Market monitoring services
  • Offset protocol development and validation services

Services for the development of compliance systems and electronic emissions reporting systems

  • Air pollution management services
  • Measuring and monitoring services
  • Modelling and mapping services
  • Risk assessment and management services
  • Services for the development of compliance and electronic emissions reporting systems

To report operating expenses:

Include all expenses related to environmental protection incurred for labour, materials and supplies, maintenance and repair, and purchased services (include fuel and electricity expenses for machinery and equipment whose sole purpose is to protect the environment).

Exclude depreciation on machinery and equipment.

To report capital expenditures:

Include all relevant outlays for machinery and equipment and their installation and repair that have been capitalized, as well as for the construction of non-residential facilities (contractors or own employees). For construction, include all costs associated with demolition, planning and design (such as engineering and consulting fees), any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation and any costs associated with the purchase of land that are neither amortized nor depreciated.

Exclude any provisions for future environmental liability.

This is an example of a table, it contains no data
  CAN$
Capital expenditures  
Operating expenses  
Total expenditures  

11. Of the (Total expenditures reported in question 10), report the proportion spent on purchased goods, technologies and services.

Purchased goods, technologies and services are goods, technologies and services provided by an outside company or service provider. They exclude in-house or own-account expenditures, such as employee wages and salaries.

When precise figures are not available, provide your best estimate.

Percentage spent

Air pollution abatement and control (end-of-pipe processes) is any method, technique, or process designed to manage and treat pollution after it is generated during the production process.

For example:

  • scrubbers at the end of emission stacks
  • filtration systems
  • cyclones
  • other barrier systems.

Air pollution prevention (integrated processes) is any method, technique, or process that reduces or eliminates the amount of pollution generated during the production process  i.e., before pollution is created. Pollution prevention activities can include equipment and technology modifications.

For example:

  • product design or reformulation to be less toxic upon use, release or disposal
  • equipment or process modifications (integrated processes)
  • recirculation, on-site recycling or reuse/recovery of air polluting substances
  • materials or feedstock substitution, solvent reduction, elimination or substitution
  • prevention of leaks of polluting substances
  • improved operating practices or pollution prevention training.

12. Of the reported for capital expenditures for air pollution management (question 10a), what proportion was spent on each of the following?

If the proportion is zero, enter '0' in the corresponding box. When precise figures are not available, provide your best estimate.

Air pollution abatement and control expenditures (end-of-pipe processes):

The purchase, operation and maintenance of equipment and processes that manage or treat air pollution after it has been created. End-of-pipe processes are not an integral part of production; their sole purpose is to abate or control undesirable substances resulting from normal production.

Examples of related equipment:

  • Filters and cyclones ( e.g., membrane, baghouse, granular beds)
  • Electrostatic precipitators
  • Scrubbers ( e.g., venturi, spray tower, mechanical, plate tower, packed tower)
  • Waste gas absorbers and waste gas flare or incinerators
  • Industrial catalytic converters
  • Adsorbers
  • Carbon capture and sequestration technologies and storage
  • Air emissions and off-gas treatments for greenhouse gases ( e.g., oxidation, scrubbing, vapour phase carbon adsorption)

Air pollution prevention expenditures (integrated processes):

The purchase, operation and maintenance of equipment and processes that reduce or eliminate air pollution at the sourcein other words, before pollution is created as opposed to an end-of-pipe process.

Examples include:

  • Product design or reformulation, such as changing product specifications to reduce or eliminate the use of toxic or polluting substances or modifying product design or composition to make them more environmentally friendly.
  • Equipment or process modifications (integrated process), such as instituting recycling within a process in order to reduce air emissions.
  • Recirculation, on-site recycling or reuse or recovery of materials or substances, such as vapour recovery. Excludes materials transferred or recycled off-site.
  • Materials or feedstock substitution, solvent reduction, elimination or substitution, such as substituting materials or feedstocks in order to reduce emissions.
  • Improved inventory management or purchasing techniques, such as avoiding the unnecessary generation of waste related to air emissions by ensuring that materials do not stay in inventory beyond shelf life; eliminating shelf-life requirements for stable materials; instituting better labelling procedures; or instituting a clearinghouse to exchange polluting materials that would otherwise be discarded.
  • Prevention of leaks and spills, such as taking measures to prevent air polluting releases; automatic shut-off valves; installed vapour recovery systems; implemented inspection or monitoring program of potential spill or leak sources.
  • Improved operating practices, such as changing production schedules to minimize equipment and feedstock changeovers; improved maintenance scheduling, record keeping or procedures; training staff to recognize and implement air pollution prevention opportunities.

Examples of related technologies:

  • Low emitting burners ( e.g., low NOx )

Exclusions:

For both categories of air pollution management, exclude costs associated with the maintenance of indoor air quality ( e.g., for health reasons), measures undertaken for cost-saving reasons ( e.g., energy savings), the purchase of electric or hybrid vehicles, the purchase of renewable energy products or biofuels, and costs associated with the production of renewable energy (to be reported elsewhere).

To report capital expenditures:

Include all relevant outlays for machinery and equipment and their installation and repair that have been capitalized, as well as for the construction of non-residential facilities (contractors or own employees). For construction, include all costs associated with demolition, planning and design (such as engineering and consulting fees), any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation and any costs associated with the purchase of land that are neither amortized nor depreciated.

Exclude any provisions for future environmental liability.

This is an example of a table, it contains no data
  Percentage
Air pollution abatement and control (end-of-pipe)  
Air pollution prevention (integrated processes)  
Total percentage  

13. Of the reported for operating expenses for air pollution management (question 10b), what proportion was spent on each of the following?

If the proportion is zero, enter '0' in the corresponding box. When precise figures are not available, provide your best estimate.

Air pollution abatement and control expenditures (end-of-pipe processes):

The purchase, operation and maintenance of equipment and processes that manage or treat air pollution after it has been created. End-of-pipe processes are not an integral part of production; their sole purpose is to abate or control undesirable substances resulting from normal production. Examples of related equipment:

  • Filters and cyclones ( e.g., membrane, baghouse, granular beds)
  • Electrostatic precipitators
  • Scrubbers ( e.g., venturi, spray tower, mechanical, plate tower, packed tower)
  • Waste gas absorbers and waste gas flare or incinerators
  • Industrial catalytic converters
  • Adsorbers
  • Carbon capture and sequestration technologies and storage
  • Air emissions and off-gas treatments for greenhouse gases ( e.g., oxidation, scrubbing, vapour phase carbon adsorption)

Air pollution prevention expenditures (integrated processes):

The purchase, operation and maintenance of equipment and processes that reduce or eliminate air pollution at the source in other words, before pollution is created as opposed to an end-of-pipe process. Examples include:

  • Product design or reformulation, such as changing product specifications to reduce or eliminate the use of toxic or polluting substances or modifying product design or composition to make them more environmentally friendly.
  • Equipment or process modifications (integrated process), such as instituting recycling within a process in order to reduce air emissions.
  • Recirculation, on-site recycling or reuse or recovery of materials or substances, such as vapour recovery. Excludes materials transferred or recycled off-site.
  • Materials or feedstock substitution, solvent reduction, elimination or substitution, such as substituting materials or feedstocks in order to reduce emissions.
  • Improved inventory management or purchasing techniques, such as avoiding the unnecessary generation of waste related to air emissions by ensuring that materials do not stay in inventory beyond shelf life; eliminating shelf-life requirements for stable materials; instituting better labelling procedures; or instituting a clearinghouse to exchange polluting materials that would otherwise be discarded.
  • Prevention of leaks and spills, such as taking measures to prevent air polluting releases; automatic shut-off valves; installed vapour recovery systems; implemented inspection or monitoring program of potential spill or leak sources.
  • Improved operating practices, such as changing production schedules to minimize equipment and feedstock changeovers; improved maintenance scheduling, record keeping or procedures; training staff to recognize and implement air pollution prevention opportunities.

Examples of related technologies:

  • Low emitting burners ( e.g., low NOx )

Exclusions:

For both categories of air pollution management, exclude costs associated with the maintenance of indoor air quality ( e.g., for health reasons), measures undertaken for cost-saving reasons ( e.g., energy savings), the purchase of electric or hybrid vehicles, the purchase of renewable energy products or biofuels, and costs associated with the production of renewable energy (to be reported elsewhere).

To report operating expenses:

Include all expenses related to environmental protection incurred for labour, materials and supplies, maintenance and repair, and purchased services (include fuel and electricity expenses for machinery and equipment whose sole purpose is to protect the environment).

Exclude depreciation on machinery and equipment.

This is an example of a table, it contains no data
  Percentage
Air pollution abatement and control (end-of-pipe)  
Air pollution prevention (integrated processes)  
Total percentage  

14. Which of the following goods and technologies related to air pollution management were purchased by this establishment during the 2018 fiscal year?

Select all that apply.

Physical or chemical treatment technologies

  • Filters and cyclones e.g., membrane, baghouse, granular bed
  • Electrostatic precipitators
  • Scrubbers  e.g., venturi, spray tower, mechanical, plate tower, packed tower
  • Waste gas absorbers and waste gas flare or incinerators
  • Industrial catalytic converters
  • Pollutant recovery condensers
  • Adsorbers
  • Other physical or chemical treatment technologies - Specify other physical or chemical treatment technologies
  • None of the above

Greenhouse gas control technologies

  • Clean coal processing technologies
  • Carbon capture and sequestration technologies and storage
  • Air and off-gas treatments  e.g., oxidation, scrubbing, vapour phase carbon adsorption
  • Other greenhouse gas control technologies - Specify other greenhouse gas control technologies
  • None of the above

Air quality and air pollution technologies

  • Low emitting burners e.g., low NOx , low SOx
  • Other air quality and air pollution technologies -Specify other air quality and air pollution technologies
  • None of the above

Monitoring and compliance technologies

  • Leak detection technologies
  • Environmental measurement apparatus
  • Other monitoring and compliance technologies - Specify other monitoring and compliance technologies
  • None of the above

15. Which of the following services related to air pollution management were purchased by this establishment during the 2018 fiscal year?

Select all that apply.

Greenhouse gas management services

  • Services for carbon credit trading, generation of compliance units, surplus allowances, emissions performance credits, and offset credits
  • Preparation of emissions reports and verification services
  • Allowance auctioning and exchange platform services
  • Market monitoring services
  • Offset protocol development and validation services
  • Services for the development of compliance systems and electronic emissions reporting systems
  • Other greenhouse gas management services - Specify other greenhouse gas management services
  • None of the above

Air pollution management services

  • Measuring and monitoring services
  • Modelling and mapping services
  • Risk assessment and management services
  • Services for the development of compliance and electronic emissions reporting systems
  • Other air pollution management services - Specify other air pollution management services
  • None of the above

Protection and remediation of soil, groundwater and surface water

16. Report this establishment's capital expenditures and operating expenses for the protection and remediation of soil, groundwater and surface water during the 2018 fiscal year.

Include expenditures related to:

  • prevention of pollutant infiltration
  • remediation or cleaning up of soil and water bodies
  • site reclamation and decommissioning (include decommissioning costs incurred in the 2018 fiscal year, even if the site was closed before this period)
  • protection of soil from erosion and other physical degradation
  • prevention and remediation of soil salinity
  • assessments and audits
  • activities related to measurement, control, laboratories
  • both own-account expenses ( e.g., employee wages and salaries) and purchased goods and services.

Exclude expenditures related to:

  • wastewater management activities (to be reported in question 4)
  • protection of biodiversity and habitat (to be reported in question 19).

If the expenditure is zero, enter '0' in the corresponding box. When precise figures are not available, provide your best estimate.

Protection and remediation of soil, groundwater and surface water: Activities aimed at the prevention of pollution infiltration: remediation or cleaning up of soils and water bodies; protection of soil from erosion, salinization and physical degradation; site reclamation and decommissioning; and related assessments and audits, monitoring, control, laboratories and the like. For example, include expenditures for in situ and ex situ biological, physical, chemical, thermal treatments, containment, etc.

Exclude wastewater management expenditures for wastewater released to surface waters, municipal sewer systems or soil, or injected underground (to be reported under 'wastewater management'); expenditures for the protection of biodiversity and habitat (to be reported under 'protection of biodiversity and habitat').

Decommissioning:

The permanent closure of all or part of an industrial facility followed by removal of process equipment, buildings and other structures, and the decontamination of the surface and subsurface.

Soil or water remediation:

Activities aimed at returning disturbed soil or water to a stable, biologically-productive state.

Examples of related activities:

In situ biological treatments

  • Enhanced bioremediation
  • Phytoremediation
  • Bioventing

Ex situ biological treatments

  • Bioreaction
  • Biopiles
  • Landfarming
  • Slurry phase biological treatment

In situ physical and chemical treatments (Including the purchase of chemicals used for remediation):

  • Biochar
  • Chemical oxidation
  • Fracturing
  • Soil flushing
  • Soil vapour extraction
  • Solidification
  • Stabilization
  • Air sparging
  • Bioslurping
  • Chemical oxidation
  • Directional wells
  • Dual phase extraction
  • Thermal treatment
  • Hydrofracturing enhancements
  • In-well air stripping
  • Passive and reactive treatment walls

Ex situ physical and chemical treatments (Include the purchase of chemicals used for remediation):

  • Chemical extraction
  • Chemical reduction and oxidation
  • Dehalogenation
  • Separation
  • Soil washing
  • Solidification
  • Stabilization
  • Adsorption and absorption
  • Advanced oxidation
  • Air stripping
  • Ion exchange
  • Precipitation
  • Flocculation
  • Coagulation
  • Separation
  • Sprinkler irrigation

In situ thermal treatments

  • Hot air injection
  • Electrical resistance

Ex situ thermal treatments

  • Incineration
  • Pyrolysis
  • Thermal desorption

Containment

To report operating expenses:

Include all expenses related to environmental protection incurred for labour, materials and supplies, maintenance and repair, and purchased services (include fuel and electricity expenses for machinery and equipment whose sole purpose is to protect the environment).

Exclude depreciation on machinery and equipment.

To report capital expenditures:

Include all relevant outlays for machinery and equipment and their installation and repair that have been capitalized, as well as for the construction of non-residential facilities (contractors or own employees). For construction, include all costs associated with demolition, planning and design (such as engineering and consulting fees), any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation and any costs associated with the purchase of land that are neither amortized nor depreciated.

Exclude any provisions for future environmental liability.

This is an example of a table, it contains no data
  CAN$
Capital expenditures  
Operating expenses  
Total expenditures  

17. Of the (Total expenditures reported in question 16), report the proportion spent on purchased goods, technologies and services.

Purchased goods, technologies and services are goods, technologies and services provided by an outside company or service provider. They exclude in-house or own-account expenditures, such as employee wages and salaries.

When precise figures are not available, provide your best estimate.

Percentage spent

18. Which of the following goods and technologies related to protection and remediation of soil, groundwater and surface water were purchased by this establishment during the 2018 fiscal year?

Include machinery, equipment, products, and technologies.

Select all that apply.

  • In situ biological treatments e.g., enhanced bioremediation, phytoremediation, bioventing
  • Ex situ biological treatments e.g., bioreaction, biopiles, landfarming, slurry phase biological treatment
  • In situ physical and chemical treatments
    Include the purchase of chemicals for remediation of soil, sediment, sludge, ground water, surface water or leachate.  e.g., biochar, chemical oxidation, fracturing, soil flushing, soil vapour extraction, solidification, stabilization, air sparging, bioslurping, chemical oxidation, directional wells, dual phase extraction, thermal treatment, hydrofracturing enhancements, in-well air stripping, passive and reactive treatment walls
  • Ex situ physical and chemical treatmentsInclude the purchase of chemicals for remediation of soil, sediment, sludge, ground water, surface water and leachate.  e.g., chemical extraction, chemical reduction and oxidation, dehalogenation, separation, soil washing, solidification, stabilization, adsorption and absorption, advanced oxidation, air stripping, ion exchange, precipitation, flocculation, coagulation, separation, sprinkler irrigationIn situ thermal treatments e.g., hot air injection, electrical resistance
  • Ex situ thermal treatments e.g., incineration, pyrolysis, thermal desorption
  • Containment
  • Other goods or technologies related to the protection and the remediation of soil, groundwater, surface water and leachate technologies - Specify other goods or technologies related to the protection and remediation of soil, groundwater, surface water and leachate technologies
  • None of the above

Protection of biodiversity and habitat

19. Report this establishment's capital expenditures and operating expenses for the protection of biodiversity and habitat during the 2018 fiscal year.

Include expenditures related to:

  • the protection, restoration and rehabilitation of wildlife and habitat
  • purchase of land for protection of species and habitat
  • assessments and audits
  • activities related to measurement, control, laboratories
  • both own-account expenses ( e.g., employee wages and salaries) and purchased goods and services.

Exclude expenditures related to:

  • site reclamation and decommissioning (to be reported in question 16)
  • landscaping for decorative purposes, the rehabilitation of predominantly build-up landscapes, or other activities undertaken for predominantly aesthetic reasons
  • weed control, maintenance of game or timber stocks, or other activities undertaken for predominantly economic reasons
  • protection and rehabilitation of historic monuments or predominantly built-up or urban landscapes (unless the purpose is the protection of biodiversity and habitat)
  • foregone revenues resulting from regulations or conventions that reduce the allowable harvest ( e.g., for logging activities).

If the expenditure is zero, enter '0' in the corresponding box. When precise figures are not available, provide your best estimate.

Protection of biodiversity and habitat:

Expenditures related to protecting wildlife and habitat from the effects of economic activity and to restoring wildlife or habitat that has been adversely affected by such activity, including related environmental assessments and audits, measurements, monitoring, control, laboratories and the like.

To report operating expenses:

Include all expenses related to environmental protection incurred for labour, materials and supplies, maintenance and repair, and purchased services (include fuel and electricity expenses for machinery and equipment whose sole purpose is to protect the environment).

Exclude depreciation on machinery and equipment.

To report capital expenditures:

Include all relevant outlays for machinery and equipment and their installation and repair that have been capitalized, as well as for the construction of non-residential facilities (contractors or own employees). For construction, include all costs associated with demolition, planning and design (such as engineering and consulting fees), any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation and any costs associated with the purchase of land that are neither amortized nor depreciated.

Exclude any provisions for future environmental liability.

This is an example of a table, it contains no data
  CAN$
Capital expenditures  
Operating expenses  
Total expenditures  

20. Of the (Total expenditures reported in question 19), report the proportion spent on purchased goods, technologies and services.

Purchased goods, technologies and services are goods, technologies and services provided by an outside company or service provider. They exclude in-house or own-account expenditures, such as employee wages and salaries.

When precise figures are not available, provide your best estimate.

Percentage spent

Noise and vibration abatement

21. Report this establishment's capital expenditures and operating expenses for noise and vibration abatement during the 2018 fiscal year.

Include expenditures related to:

  • the control, reduction and abatement of noise and vibration, including preventive in-process modifications at the source, the construction of anti-noise or anti-vibration facilities, or any other related activities
  • assessments and audits
  • activities related to measurement, control, laboratories
  • both own-account expenses ( e.g., employee wages and salaries) and purchased goods and services.

Exclude expenditures related to workers' health and safety.

If the expenditure is zero, enter '0' in the corresponding box. When precise figures are not available, provide your best estimate.

Noise and vibration abatement:

Activities aimed at the control, reduction and abatement of industrial and transport noise and vibration related to the activities of this establishment to protect the environment, including preventive in-process modifications at the source; construction of anti-noise/vibration facilities; related assessments and audits, measurement, control, laboratories and the like.

To report operating expenses:

Include all expenses related to environmental protection incurred for labour, materials and supplies, maintenance and repair, and purchased services (include fuel and electricity expenses for machinery and equipment whose sole purpose is to protect the environment).

Exclude depreciation on machinery and equipment.

To report capital expenditures:

Include all relevant outlays for machinery and equipment and their installation and repair that have been capitalized, as well as for the construction of non-residential facilities (contractors or own employees). For construction, include all costs associated with demolition, planning and design (such as engineering and consulting fees), any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation and any costs associated with the purchase of land that are neither amortized nor depreciated.

Exclude any provisions for future environmental liability.

This is an example of a table, it contains no data
  CAN$
Capital expenditures  
Operating expenses  
Total expenditures  

22. Of the (Total expenditures reported in question 21), report the proportion spent on purchased goods, technologies and services.

Purchased goods, technologies and services are goods, technologies and services provided by an outside company or service provider. They exclude in-house or own-account expenditures, such as employee wages and salaries.

When precise figures are not available, provide your best estimate.

Percentage spent

Protection against radiation

23. Report this establishment's capital expenditures and operating expenses for the protection against radiation during the 2018 fiscal year.

Include expenditures related to:

  • protection of ambient media
  • the transport and treatment of high-level radioactive waste
  • assessments and audits
  • activities related to measurement, control, laboratories
  • both own-account expenses ( e.g., employee wages and salaries) and purchased goods and services.

Exclude expenditures related to:

  • the prevention of technological hazards ( e.g., external safety of nuclear power plants)
  • workers' health and safety
  • management of low-level radioactive waste (reported in question 1).

If the expenditure is zero, enter '0' in the corresponding box. When precise figures are not available, provide your best estimate.

Protection against radiation:

Activities aimed at the prevention, reduction or elimination of the negative consequences of radiation on the environment. This includes all handling, transportation and treatment of radioactive waste ( i.e., waste that requires shielding during normal handling and transportation because of its high radionuclide content); the protection of ambient media; related assessments and audits, measurement, control, laboratories and the like; as well as any other activities related to the containment of radioactive waste.

Excluded are activities and measures related to low-level radioactive waste (to be reported under 'solid waste management'); the prevention of technological hazards ( e.g., external safety of nuclear power plants); and measures taken to protect workers.

Radioactive waste:

Radioactive waste is any material that contains or is contaminated with radionuclides at concentration or radioactivity levels greater than the "exempt quantities" established by the competent authorities, and for which no use is foreseen. These include wastes produced at nuclear power plants and associated nuclear fuel cycle facilities as well as through other uses of radioactive material ( e.g., the use of radionuclides in hospitals and research establishments). Other important wastes are those from mining and milling of uranium and from the reprocessing of spent fuel.

Low-level radioactive waste:

Waste that contains or is contaminated with radionuclides at a concentration or radioactivity level that is low enough that shielding is not required during normal handling and transportation.

To report operating expenses:

Include all expenses related to environmental protection incurred for labour, materials and supplies, maintenance and repair, and purchased services (include fuel and electricity expenses for machinery and equipment whose sole purpose is to protect the environment).

Exclude depreciation on machinery and equipment.

To report capital expenditures:

Include all relevant outlays for machinery and equipment and their installation and repair that have been capitalized, as well as for the construction of non-residential facilities (contractors or own employees). For construction, include all costs associated with demolition, planning and design (such as engineering and consulting fees), any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation and any costs associated with the purchase of land that are neither amortized nor depreciated.

Exclude any provisions for future environmental liability.

This is an example of a table, it contains no data
  CAN$
Capital expenditures  
Operating expenses  
Total expenditures  

24. Of the (Total expenditures reported in question 23), report the proportion spent on purchased goods, technologies and services.

Purchased goods, technologies and services are goods, technologies and services provided by an outside company or service provider. They exclude in-house or own-account expenditures, such as employee wages and salaries. When precise figures are not available, provide your best estimate.

Percentage spent

Environmental charges

25. Report the amount this establishment paid in environmental charges during the 2018 fiscal year.

Exclude expenditures on environmental charges already reported in another question. If the expenditure is zero, enter '0' in the corresponding box. When precise figures are not available, provide your best estimate.

This is an example of a table, it contains no data
  CAN$
Permits, approvals, fees, levies, special assessments and related fees  
Carbon offset credits  
Fines, penalties or damage awards paid to government agencies or individuals, or other charges paid to regulating bodies in order to allow operations to take place at this establishment  
All other environmental charges - Specify all other environmental charges   
Total environmental charges  

Other environmental protection activities

26. Report this establishment's capital expenditures and operating expenses for environmental protection during the 2018 fiscal year that were not already reported.

Include expenditures related to:

  • the general administration of your environmental program
  • environmental training and information programs not already reported
  • assessments or audits not already reported
  • any other environmental protection expenditures not already reported
  • both own-account expenses ( e.g., employee wages and salaries) and purchased goods and services.

Exclude expenditures related to:

  • research and development (not covered in this survey)
  • heat or energy savings and management (to be reported in question 28a)
  • fuel efficient vehicles and transportation goods or technologies (to be reported in question 28b)
  • the production of renewable or clean energy (to be reported in questions 28c and 28e)
  • the purchase of biofuels, biochemicals or biomaterials (to be reported in question 28d).

If the expenditure is zero, enter '0' in the corresponding box. When precise figures are not available, provide your best estimate.

Use this question to report expenditures for any environmental protection activities not already reported in the previous categories.

Include general administration of environmental programs; environmental training that could not be separated into the other categories; multifaceted environmental assessments and audits; etc. Also use this question to report imputed interest on funds held in trust against future environmental liabilities.

To report operating expenses:

Include all expenses related to environmental protection incurred for labour, materials and supplies, maintenance and repair, and purchased services (include fuel and electricity expenses for machinery and equipment whose sole purpose is to protect the environment).

Exclude depreciation on machinery and equipment.

To report capital expenditures:

Include all relevant outlays for machinery and equipment and their installation and repair that have been capitalized, as well as for the construction of non-residential facilities (contractors or own employees).

For construction, include all costs associated with demolition, planning and design (such as engineering and consulting fees), any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation and any costs associated with the purchase of land that are neither amortized nor depreciated.

Exclude any provisions for future environmental liability.

This is an example of a table, it contains no data
  CAN$
Capital expenditures  
Operating expenses  
Total expenditures  

27. Of the (Total expenditures reported in question 26), report the proportion spent on purchased goods, technologies and services.

Purchased goods, technologies and services are goods, technologies and services provided by an outside company or service provider. They exclude in-house or own-account expenditures, such as employee wages and salaries.

When precise figures are not available, provide your best estimate.

Percentage spent

Environmental technologies and processes

28. During the 2018 fiscal year, did this establishment have expenditures in any of the following categories?

Include both operating and capital expenditures.

To report operating expenses:

Include all expenses related to environmental protection incurred for labour, materials and supplies, maintenance and repair, and purchased services (include fuel and electricity expenses for machinery and equipment whose sole purpose is to protect the environment).

Exclude depreciation on machinery and equipment.

To report capital expenditures:

Include all relevant outlays for machinery and equipment and their installation and repair that have been capitalized, as well as for the construction of non-residential facilities (contractors or own employees). For construction, include all costs associated with demolition, planning and design (such as engineering and consulting fees), any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation and any costs associated with the purchase of land that are neither amortized nor depreciated.

Exclude any provisions for future environmental liability.

This is an example of a table, it contains no data
  Yes No
Heat or energy savings and management    
Fuel efficient vehicles and transportation goods or technologies    
Production of energy from renewable sources, whether for sale or own use    
Purchase of biofuels, biochemicals or biomaterials    
Production of nuclear energy    

Heat or energy savings and management

29. Report this establishment's capital expenditures and operating expenses related to the management of energy resources through heat or energy savings and management during the 2018 fiscal year.

Include expenditures related to:

  • energy savings through in-process modifications
  • purchase of efficient industrial or commercial equipment, demand management technologies, or energy storage technologies
  • purchase of energy efficiency services or smart grid services
  • building and fleet energy audits
  • thermal insulation activities
  • energy recovery activities
  • assessments and audits
  • activities related to measurement, control, laboratories
  • more efficient furnace
  • lighting upgrades
  • both own-account expenses ( e.g., employee wages and salaries) and purchased goods, technologies and services.

Exclude expenditures related to:

  • pollution abatement and control or prevention for air pollution (to be reported in question 10)
  • the purchase of energy-efficient vehicles (to be reported in question 34)
  • renewable/clean energy production (to be reported in questions 36 and 40)
  • the purchase of biofuels (to be reported in question 38).

If the expenditure is zero, enter '0' in the corresponding box. When precise figures are not available, provide your best estimate. Please report all expenditures incurred for heat or energy savings and management, whether or not they are in response to current or anticipated Canadian or international regulations, conventions or voluntary agreements.

Heat or energy savings and management:

Activities aiming at the minimization of the intake of energy through in-process modifications as well as the minimization of heat and energy losses. This includes insulation activities; energy recovery; related assessments and audits; measurement, control, laboratories and the like.

Energy savings through in-process modifications:

Replacement or adjustment of production processes, including energy production processes designed to reduce the use of energy for producing a certain output (combined heat and power). This also includes heat and electricity co-generation, improvement of energy efficiency, etc.

Insulation activities:

Activities aimed at reducing the use of energy for heating and cooling buildings.

Energy recovery:

The recovery of energy from non-renewable energy sources ( e.g., non-biodegradable waste).

Measurement, control, laboratories and the like:

Activities designed to measure, control and monitor the use of energy. For example, energy audits, production of energy performance certificates, and assessments of potential energy savings.

Examples of related goods and technologies:

  • Efficient industrial or commercial equipment
  • High efficiency burners and boilers (Energy Star)
  • High efficiency pumps (Energy Star) and motors ( NEMA Premium TM )
  • High efficiency industrial or commercial HVAC (Energy Star)
  • Combined heat and power generation (CHP/cogeneration)
  • High efficiency industrial or commercial lighting systems (Energy Star)
  • Automation and control technologies
  • Energy efficient filters and processes
  • Advanced insulation ( e.g., super insulating materials (SIMs); vacuum insulation panels (VIP), gas-filled panels (GFP); and aerogel-based products (ABP))
  • Predictive maintenance technologies ( e.g., twinning, sensors, related software)

Demand management technologies

  • Smart inverters
  • Smart meters and devices
  • Phasor measurement units
  • Management systems (software)

Energy storage technologies

  • Flywheels
  • Equipment for pumped hydro systems
  • Equipment for compressed air systems
  • Advanced batteries ( e.g., NiCd , NiMH , Li-ion , NaS , NaNiCl , hybrid flow, redox flow, hydrogen storage, synthetic natural gas)
  • Fuel cells
  • Thermal storage systems
  • Double-layer capacitors (DLC)
  • Superconducting magnetic energy storage (SMES)

Examples of related services:

  • Energy efficiency services
  • Green building certification services
  • Building or fleet energy audit and air leakage testing services
  • Energy management system services
  • Energy monitoring services
  • Energy demand control services
  • Data analysis and modelling services
  • Process integration services
  • Services for advanced insulation activities
  • Energy efficiency consulting
  • Predictive maintenance services

Smart Grid Services

  • Energy storage solutions
  • Microgrid solutions
  • Cyber security services
  • Data management and communications solutions
  • Demand management services ( e.g., peak load management and load following)
  • Monitoring solutions services ( e.g., self-healing grids)

To report operating expenses:

Include all expenses related to environmental protection incurred for labour, materials and supplies, maintenance and repair, and purchased services (include fuel and electricity expenses for machinery and equipment whose sole purpose is to protect the environment).

Exclude depreciation on machinery and equipment.

To report capital expenditures:

Include all relevant outlays for machinery and equipment and their installation and repair that have been capitalized, as well as for the construction of non-residential facilities (contractors or own employees). For construction, include all costs associated with demolition, planning and design (such as engineering and consulting fees), any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation and any costs associated with the purchase of land that are neither amortized nor depreciated.

Exclude any provisions for future environmental liability.

This is an example of a table, it contains no data
  CAN$
Capital expenditures  
Operating expenses  
Total expenditures  

30. Of the (Total expenditures reported in question 29), report the proportion spent on purchased goods, technologies and services.

Purchased goods, technologies and services are goods, technologies and services provided by an outside company or service provider. They exclude in-house or own-account expenditures, such as employee wages and salaries.

When precise figures are not available, provide your best estimate.

Percentage spent

31. Which of the following goods and technologies related to heat or energy savings and management were purchased by this establishment during the 2018 fiscal year?

Include machinery, equipment, products, and technologies.

Select all that apply.

Efficient industrial or commercial equipment

  • High efficiency burners and boilers e.g., Energy Star
  • High efficiency pumps and motors  e.g., Energy Star, NEMA Premium TM
  • High efficiency industrial or commercial HVAC e.g., Energy Star
  • Combined heat and power generation (CHP/cogeneration)
  • High efficiency industrial or commercial lighting systems  e.g., Energy Star
  • Automation and control technologies
  • Energy efficient filters and processes
  • Advanced insulation  e.g., super insulating materials (SIMs), vacuum insulation panels (VIP), gas-filled panels (GFP), and aerogel-based products (ABP)
  • Predictive maintenance technologies  e.g., twinning, sensors, related software
  • Other efficient industrial or commercial equipment - Specify other efficient industrial or commercial equipment
  • None of the above

Demand management technologies

  • Smart inverters
  • Smart meters and devices
  • Phasor measurement units
  • Management systems  e.g., software
  • Other demand management technologies - Specify other demand management technologies
  • None of the above

Energy storage technologies

  • Flywheels
  • Equipment for pumped hydro systems
  • Equipment for compressed air systems
  • Advanced batteries  e.g., NiCd , NiMH , Li-ion , NaS , NaNiCl , hybrid flow, redox flow, hydrogen storage, synthetic natural gas
  • Fuel cells
  • Thermal storage systems
  • Double-layer capacitors (DLC)
  • Superconducting magnetic energy storage (SMES)
  • Other energy storage technologies - Specify other energy storage technologies
  • None of the above

32. Which of the following services related to heat or energy savings and management were purchased by this establishment during the 2018 fiscal year?

Select all that apply.

Energy efficiency services

  • Green building certification services
  • Building or fleet energy audit and air leakage testing services
  • Energy management system services
  • Energy monitoring services
  • Energy demand control services
  • Data analysis and modelling services
  • Process integration services
  • Services for advanced insulation activities
  • Energy efficiency consulting
  • Predictive maintenance services
  • Other energy efficiency services - Specify other energy efficiency services
  • None of the above

Smart grid services 

  • Energy storage solutions
  • Microgrid solutions
  • Cyber security services
  • Data management and communications solutions
  • Demand management services  e.g., peak load management and load following
  • Monitoring solutions services  e.g., self-healing grids
  • Other smart grid services - Specify other smart grid services
  • None of the above

33. Report this establishment's expenditures for goods, technologies and services related to the management of energy resources through heat or energy savings and management during the 2018 fiscal year in each of the following categories.

This is an example of a table, it contains no data
  CAN$
Efficient industrial or commercial equipment  
Demand management technologies  
Energy storage technologies  
Other heat or energy savings goods or technologies  
Energy efficiency services  
Smart grid services  
Other heat or energy savings services  
Total  

Clean vehicles and transportation technologies

34. Report the amount this establishment spent on the purchase of clean vehicles and transportation goods or technologies during the 2018 fiscal year.

Include the purchase of:

  • electric, hybrid, and fuel cell vehicles (all-types)
  • fuel efficient aircraft
  • electric vehicle infrastructure
  • alternative fuel and refuelling infrastructure
  • low rolling resistance tires
  • vehicle emissions monitoring technologies
  • alternative fuel retrofit technologies
  • equipment or software for vehicle fleet management and logistics.

Exclude:

  • operating and maintenance costs for running clean vehicles
  • expenses for fleet energy audits (to be reported in question 29)
  • any equipment or vehicles for sale.

If the expenditure is zero, enter '0' in the corresponding box. When precise figures are not available, provide your best estimate.

Total expenditures

35. Which of the following clean vehicles and fuel efficient transportation equipment were purchased by this establishment during the 2018 fiscal year?

Select all that apply.

Fuel efficient vehicles

  • Electric vehicles - Include all vehicle-types.
  • Hybrid vehicles - Include all vehicle-types.
  • Fuel cell vehicles - Include all vehicle-types.
  • Fuel efficient aircraft
  • Other fuel efficient vehicles - Specify other fuel efficient vehicles
  • None of the above

Fuel efficient transportation equipment

  • Electric vehicle infrastructure - Include charging stations.
  • Alternative fuel and refuelling infrastructure - Include hydrogen and natural gas.
  • Low rolling resistance tires
  • Vehicle emission monitoring
  • Alternative fuel retrofit technologies
  • Equipment or software for vehicle fleet management and logistics
  • Other fuel efficient transportation equipment - Specify other fuel efficient transportation equipment
  • None of the above

Production of energy from renewable sources

36. Report this establishment's capital expenditures and operating expenses related to the production of energy from renewable sources during the 2018 fiscal year, including both electricity and heat.

Report also the proportion of energy produced from renewable sources for own use.

Include expenditures related to:

  • the production of energy from renewable sources, whether for sale or own use
  • the installation, operation, and maintenance of equipment, including infrastructure to support the production of renewable energy ( e.g., costs for approvals and planning, transmission and distribution lines and other infrastructure)
  • the operating and maintenance expenses of existing equipment.

Exclude expenditures related to:

  • the purchase of the feedstock used to produce energy, such as biofuels (to be reported in question 38)
  • the production of nuclear energy (to be reported in question 40)
  • electricity purchased from the grid.

When precise figures are not available, provide your best estimate.

For this question, please report expenditures related to the production of energy from renewable sources, whether for sale or own use.

Renewable energy:

Energy obtained from resources that can be naturally replenished or renewed within a human lifespan, that is, the resource is a sustainable source of energy. This includes: wind, solar, aero-thermal, geothermal, hydrothermal, from wave, tidal and ocean thermal energy, hydropower, biomass, landfill gas, sewage treatment plant gas and biogases.

Wind energy systems or equipment:

Horizontal and vertical axis turbines; towers and other types of equipment used to generate energy and electricity.

Geothermal:

Hot water or steam extracted from the Earth's interior and used for geothermal heat pumps, water heating or electricity generation.

Small, mini or micro-hydroelectric facility:

Micro-hydro = less than 100 kW ; Mini-hydro = 100 kW to 1 000 kW (1 MW ); Small hydro = 1 MW to 25 MW (or 50 MW in British Columbia).

Larger hydroelectricity facility:

Hydroelectric facilities larger than 25 MW (or 50 MW in British Columbia).

Solar energy systems or equipment:

Active and passive solar systems; photovoltaics; solar thermal generators; solar water and space heating systems.

Bioenergy (Biomass energy):

Systems and equipment (turbines, boilers, process equipment) that use organic matter such as forest and agricultural residues to produce electricity, steam, or heat.

Waste to energy:

Use of a non-biomass waste product to produce electricity, steam, or heat.

Other renewable energy systems or equipment:

Please specify your renewable energy systems and equipment if they are not listed in the preceding categories (for example, systems and equipment for energy production from wave, tidal, and ocean thermal energy conversion systems).

To report operating expenses:

Include all expenses related to environmental protection incurred for labour, materials and supplies, maintenance and repair, and purchased services (include fuel and electricity expenses for machinery and equipment whose sole purpose is to protect the environment).

Exclude depreciation on machinery and equipment.

To report capital expenditures:

Include all relevant outlays for machinery and equipment and their installation and repair that have been capitalized, as well as for the construction of non-residential facilities (contractors or own employees). For construction, include all costs associated with demolition, planning and design (such as engineering and consulting fees), any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation and any costs associated with the purchase of land that are neither amortized nor depreciated.

Exclude any provisions for future environmental liability.

This is an example of a table, it contains no data
  Capital expenditures
CAN$
Operating expenses
CAN$
Percentage of energy production for OWN use
Wind      
Geothermal      
Small, mini-hydroelectricity and
micro-hydroelectricity
     
Large hydroelectricity      
Solar      
Bioenergy production      
Waste to energy      
Other energy production from renewable resources 1      
Other energy production from renewable resources 2      
Other energy production from renewable resources 3      
Total expenditures for the production of renewable energy      

37. Which of the following goods or technologies used for the production of renewable energy were purchased by this establishment during the 2018 fiscal year?

Select all that apply.

Wind

  • Wind turbine equipment, nacelle, blades, towers
  • Switchgear, transformers
  • Other wind technologies - Specify other wind technologies
  • None of the above

Geothermal

  • Heat pumps
  • Other equipment used in geothermal energy systems - Specify other equipment used in geothermal energy systems
  • None of the above

Small, mini-hydroelectric and micro-hydroelectric facilities

  • Turbines and related components - Exclude wave and tidal energy.
  • Turbines and related components for wave or tidal energy
  • Generators, valves, gates, transformers, switchgear
  • Include components.
  • Other technologies related to small, mini-hydro and micro-hydro facilities - Specify other technologies related to small, mini-hydro and micro-hydro facilities
  • None of the above

Large hydroelectric facilities

  • Turbines and related components - Exclude wave and tidal energy.
  • Turbines and related components for wave or tidal energy
  • Generators, valves, gates, transformers, switchgear - Include components.
  • Other technologies related to large hydroelectric facilities - Specify other technologies related to large hydroelectric facilities
  • None of the above

Solar energy

  • Active solar heating equipment - e.g., glazed flat plate collectors, glazed evacuated tubes and collectors, unglazed panels and collectors for heating pools, perforated cladding for solar air heating
  • Active solar-power generation equipment - e.g., concentrating mirrors, receivers
  • Photovoltaic energy equipment - e.g., photovoltaic cells, modules, panels and arrays, inverters for solar photovoltaic systems
  • Other solar technologies - Specify other solar technologies
  • None of the above

Waste to energy

  • Liquid organic waste to energy equipment
  • Solid organic waste to energy equipment
  • Other waste to energy technologies - Specify other waste to energy technologies
  • None of the above

Production of bioenergy

  • Mixers and centrifuges
  • Filtration systems
  • Biofuel reactors - e.g., distillation towers, pyrolizers, catalyst beds, gasifiers, heat digesters
  • Washers
  • Dryers
  • Heaters
  • Storage systems related to bioenergy production
  • Shredders and chippers
  • Combined heat and power bioenergy systems
  • Domestic woodstoves
  • Biomass-fired industrial boilers
  • Anaerobic digesters
  • Other bioenergy production technologies - Exclude purchased biofuels. - Specify other bioenergy production technologies - Exclude purchased biofuels.
  • None of the above

Purchase of biofuels, biochemicals and biomaterials

38. Which of the following biofuels, biochemicals and biomaterials were purchased by this establishment during the 2018 fiscal year?

Select all that apply.

Biofuels

  • Pellets, chips, cubes, briquettes
  • Black pellets
  • Energy logs
  • Biocoal
  • Biochar
  • Ethanol, cellulosic ethanol
  • Biodiesel
  • Renewable diesel
  • Pyrolysis oil
  • Synthetic fuels  e.g., DME , Fisher Tropsch fuels, Biojet fuels
  • Bio-oil, pyrolytic oil, biomethanol
  • Biobutanol
  • Biogas
  • Renewable natural gas  e.g., biomethane
  • Syngas
  • Biohydrogen
  • Other bioenergy and biofuels - Specify other bioenergy and biofuels
  • None of the above

Biochemicals

  • Aromatics, amino and organic acids, phenols, polyols
  • Cellulose, hemicellulose, lignin
  • Biochar
  • Bio-oils, lubricants
  • Solvents, adhesives, paints, coatings
  • Biopolymers and resins
  • Biopesticides
  • Biostimulants
  • Additives and catalysts  e.g., sodium hydroxide, potassium hydroxide, enzymes
  • Other biochemicals - Specify other biochemicals
  • None of the above

Biomaterials

  • Mats, cellulose products
  • Bio-based auto parts, building materials, panels, cross laminated timber
  • Plastics, films, foams, hydrogels
  • Nanomaterials and nanocomposites
  • Nanocrystalline cellulose
  • Other biomaterials - Specify other biomaterials
  • None of the above

39. During the 2018 fiscal year, how much did this establishment spend on purchases in each of the following categories of biofuels, biochemicals and biomaterials?

This is an example of a table, it contains no data
  CAN$
Biofuels  
Biochemicals  
Biomaterials  
Total purchases of biofuels, biochemicals and biomaterials  

Production of nuclear energy

40. Report this establishment's capital expenditures and operating expenses related to the production of nuclear energy during the 2018 fiscal year.

Exclude the costs of any feedstock used to produce energy such as uranium.

If the expenditure is zero, enter '0' in the corresponding box. When precise figures are not available, provide your best estimate.

This is an example of a table, it contains no data
  CAN$
Capital expenditures  
Operating expenses  
Total expenditures  

41. Which of the following goods and technologies related to the production of nuclear energy were purchased during the 2018 fiscal year?

Select all that apply.

  • Nuclear reactors or nuclear island components
  • Nuclear fuel handling, processing, and fabrication equipment
  • Other nuclear energy technologies - Specify other nuclear technologies
  • None of the above

Drivers and obstacles

42. Which of the following were drivers to the adoption of new or significantly improved clean technologies, systems or equipment for this establishment during the 2018 fiscal year?

Select all that apply.

  • Sufficient return on investment - i.e., sufficient business case
  • Regulations
  • Government incentives
  • Carbon pricing
  • Voluntary agreement
  • Public image
  • Corporate policy
  • Part of regular capital turnover
  • Other drivers - Specify other drivers
  • There were no drivers during the 2018 fiscal year

43. Which of the following were obstacles to the adoption of new or significantly improved clean technologies, systems or equipment for this establishment during the 2018 fiscal year?

Select all that apply.

  • Lack of regulations
  • Changing regulations
  • Insufficient return on investment - i.e., no business case
  • Difficulty in obtaining financing - e.g., internal, private or government
  • Lack of information or knowledge related to systems or equipment (new or significantly improved)
  • Lack of available systems or equipment (new or significantly improved)
  • Lack of technical skills required to support this type of investment
  • Lack of technical support or services - e.g., from consultants or vendors
  • Regulatory or policy barriers
  • Organizational structure too inflexible
  • Decisions made by parent, affiliate or subsidiary businesses
  • Difficulty in integrating new technologies with existing infrastructure, systems, standards and processes
  • Other obstacles - Specify other obstacles
  • There were no obstacles during the 2018 fiscal year

Environmental management practices

44. Did this establishment use an environmental management system during the 2018 fiscal year?

Environmental management system:

A management structure that allows an establishment to assess and control the environmental impact of its activities.

  • Yes
  • No
  • Don't know

45. Did this establishment develop and/or follow a pollution prevention plan during the 2018 fiscal year?

Pollution prevention plan:

A plan that meets or exceeds compliance and improves the efficiency and environmental performance of an establishment or a specific operation, by the purchase, operation and maintenance of equipment and processes that reduce or eliminate pollution at the source (before pollution is created).

  • Yes
  • No
  • Don't know

46. Did this establishment use Life Cycle Management, Life Cycle Assessment, Design for Environment (DfE) or Ecodesign principles for decision-making during the 2018 fiscal year?

Life Cycle Management, Life Cycle Assessment:

Tools that identify and measure direct and indirect environmental, energy and resource impacts associated with a product, process or service through its design, production, usage and final disposal.

Design for Environment:

The integration of environmental considerations into the design, production, distribution, use and end-of-life of products.

Ecodesign:

The incorporation of specific design elements into a product in order to reduce the overall environmental impact of that product over its lifecycle.

  • Yes
  • No
  • Don't know

47. Was this establishment certified under the ISO 14000 family of environmental management standards during the 2018 fiscal year?

ISO 14000 family:

An internationally recognized set of environmental management standards and guidelines that are primarily concerned with environmental management systems developed by the International Organization for Standardization.

  • Yes
  • No
  • Don't know

48. Did this establishment participate in any environmental voluntary agreements or voluntary environmental programs during the 2018 fiscal year?

e.g., Environmental Performance Agreements (EPAs), Canadian GHG Reductions Registry, Canadian Industry Program for Energy Conservation (CIPEC), Forestry Stewardship Council (FSC), etc.

Voluntary actions or participation in voluntary environmental programs:

Any non-mandated action undertaken at this establishment in order to protect or restore the natural environment. This can include participation in various established codes of environmental practice, following guidelines, working towards emission and waste reduction targets, voluntary agreements with governments, etc.

Environmental Performance Agreement (EPA):

An agreement with core design criteria negotiated among parties to achieve specified environmental results. Performance agreements are voluntary, non-statutory instruments that allow parties with common objectives to address a particular environmental issue.

The GHG CleanProducts® Registry:

A web-based registry that lists and delists greenhouse gas projects and resulting verified emission reductions and removals.

The Canadian Industry Program for Energy Conservation:

A partnership between private industry and the federal Government that aims to promote and improve Canada's industrial energy efficiency and reduce greenhouse gas emissions from energy use in the industrial sector.

Forestry Stewardship Council:

A certification and labeling program operated by a non-profit multi-stakeholder organization in order to promote responsible forest management ( i.e., protecting habitats, indigenous peoples' rights, worker's rights, and areas of significant environmental or cultural importance).

Eco-labelling programs:

Programs that are designed to encourage manufacturers and suppliers to develop environmentally preferable products and services. The use of the eco-label is meant to help consumers identify products and services that are less harmful to the environment. e.g., Environmental Choice (operated by TerraChoice Environmental Services Inc. for Environment Canada).

  • Yes
  • No
  • Don't know

Specify the programs, accords or agreements:

49. Did this establishment have a 'green' procurement policy or guidelines during the 2018 fiscal year?

Green procurement policy:

A policy that encourages the procurement of goods and services with reduced environmental impacts. When making purchasing decisions, the environmental performance of a product is considered over its entire life cycle ( e.g., manufacturing, transportation, storage, handling, operation, and disposal).

  • Yes
  • No
  • Don't know

50. Did this establishment have an environmental supply chain management policy during the 2018 fiscal year?

Environmental supply chain management refers to the inclusion of environmental standards in the planning and management of activities involved in sourcing and procurement, conversion, and all logistics management activities. It also includes the coordination and collaboration with channel partners, which can be suppliers, intermediaries, third-party service providers, and customers. Environmental supply chain management integrates supply and demand environmental management within and across companies.

  • Yes
  • No
  • Don't know

51. Did this establishment implement any new or improved environmental processes and practices in response to an environmental supply chain management policy in place at a supplier or client business during the 2018 fiscal year?

Environmental processes:

Technologies, activities or practices put in place to manage, treat, reduce or eliminate pollution.

For example:

  • Installing a new system for wastewater management
  • Getting ISO 14000 certification
  • Implementing new activities related to measurement, control, laboratories

Environmental supply chain management refers to the inclusion of environmental standards in the planning and management of activities involved in sourcing and procurement, conversion, and all logistics management activities. It also includes the coordination and collaboration with channel partners, which can be suppliers, intermediaries, third-party service providers, and customers. Environmental supply chain management integrates supply and demand environmental management within and across companies.

  • Yes
  • No
  • Don't know

52. Did this establishment take advantage of any Canadian federal, provincial/territorial, or local government environmental incentive programs, grants, loans, or tax credits during the 2018 fiscal year?

e.g., ecoENERGY Initiatives, Industrial Research Assistance Program (IRAP), SD Tech Fund, or Accelerated Capital Cost Allowance or Scientific Research and Experimental Development (SR&ED) for energy efficiency and renewable energy sources

Environmental incentive programs, grants, loans, or tax credits:

Selected examples include:

EcoENERGY Initiative: a set of focused measures to help Canadians use energy more efficiently, boost renewable energy supplies and develop cleaner energy technologies.

As well, certain capital costs of systems that produce energy by using renewable energy sources or fuels from waste, or conserve energy by using fuel more efficiently, are eligible for accelerated capital cost allowance.

The Sustainable Development Technology Fund: federal funding to cover up to 33% of the costs involved in developing and testing a technology that is created to deal with climate change issues, clean air, or clean water or soil quality. Eligible products or processes are those that produce and distribute energy, create electricity, or remove pollutants in certain industry sectors.

  • Yes
  • No
  • Don't know

Specify the incentive programs, grants or loans:

53. Did this establishment perform a greenhouse gas emissions inventory during the 2018 fiscal year?

Greenhouse gas emissions inventory:

A record of the amount of greenhouse gas produced by the establishment over a given unit of time.

  • Yes
  • No
  • Don't know

54. Did this establishment participate in any form of carbon-trading, either by purchasing or selling carbon offset credits in the 2018 fiscal year?

Carbon-trading by purchasing or selling carbon-offset credits:

A market-based system in which an establishment that produced less than their allowable carbon emissions can trade or sell the unused portion of their allowance to another establishment.

  • Yes, purchased carbon offset credits only OR purchased more than sold
  • Yes, sold carbon offset credits only OR sold more than purchased
  • No, did not participate in any of the above
  • Don't know

55. Did this establishment participate in any other environmental management practices during the 2018 fiscal year?

Other environmental management practices:

Use this question to report any environmental management practices not included in the questions 44 to 54.

  • Yes
  • No
  • Don't know

Specify the other environmental management practices:

Changes or events

1. 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
  • Organizational change
  • Price changes in labour or raw materials
  • Natural disaster
  • Recession
  • Change in product line
  • Sold business or business units
  • Expansion
  • New or lost contract
  • Plant closures
  • Acquisition of business or business units
  • Other - Specify the other changes or events:
  • No changes or events

Contact person

1. Statistics Canada may need to contact the person who completed this questionnaire for further information.

Is the provided given names and the 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

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

Include the time spent gathering the necessary information.

  • Hours:
  • Minutes:

2. Do you have any comments about this questionnaire?

Administrative data sources in the production of official statistics – Income, pensions, spending and wealth

Household and family assets, debt and wealth

Mortgage Loan and housing survey data

Statistics Canada uses the following mortgage loan and housing survey data:

  • rental and mortgage characteristics
  • social housing characteristics
  • building construction characteristics, starts and completions
  • addresses and locations.

Statistical programs that use these data for statistical and research purposes only:

Household spending and savings

Credit information

Statistics Canada uses the following aggregated and anonymized credit information:

  • Origin of cardholder (U.S.A. and overseas visitors: country code; Canadian residents: Forward Sortation Area (FSA) level)
  • Merchant location (U.S.A. and overseas visitors: FSA level; Canadian residents: country code)
  • Card type (personal, business)
  • Value of transactions

Statistical programs using these data for statistical and research purposes only:

Personal information is not included in these data.

Statistics Canada uses the following credit information:

  • Personal information (such as name, address, date of birth, gender, and Social Insurance Number)
  • Account balance and payments
  • Account modifications and account history by credit type

Statistical programs using these data for statistical and research purposes only:

Pensions and retirement income programs

Pension plan data

Statistics Canada uses the following pension plan data:

  • Pension plan name and number
  • Active membership counts by geography and plan type
  • Contributions and market level of assets

The following statistical program uses these data for statistical and research purposes only:

Canadian Census Health and Environment Cohorts (CanCHECs)

The Canadian Census Health and Environment Cohorts (CanCHECs) enable the creation of population-based linked data sets.Footnote 1 The CanCHECs combine census long-form respondents (or the National Household Survey respondents) with administrative health data (e.g., mortality, cancer, hospitalizations, ambulatory care, and mental health) and annual mailing address postal codes. These data can be used to examine health outcomes by population characteristics measured by the census long-form sample data or the National Household Survey data (e.g., income, education, occupation, language, ethnocultural diversity, immigrant status, or Indigenous identity). Environmental data can be integrated into the CanCHECs using the annual postal code file in order to examine the association between environmental exposure and a health outcome. There are seven CanCHEC cycles: 1991, 1996, 2001, 2006, 2011, 2016, and 2021. Individuals who appear in more than one CanCHEC can be identified using the CanCHEC Cycle Overlap data set. The exclusive purpose of this data set is to allow researchers who are pooling two or more CanCHECs to remove duplicate records for a given individual to prevent overcounting individuals and associated events. It is important to note that the CanCHEC Cycle Overlap data set cannot be used for any other purpose.

Check out the short video Canadian Census Health and Environment Cohorts (CanCHECs): Creation of a new health surveillance program for an overview of the 1991 to 2011 CanCHECs, with examples of how these data have been used in research.Footnote 2

The CanCHEC linkages were approved by Statistics Canada's senior management (Microdata linkage approval number 019-2019) and are governed by the Directive on Microdata Linkage.

Demographic, social and economic data

1991, 1996, 2001, 2006, 2016, and 2021 Census long-form surveys

 The Census of Population is the primary source of socioeconomic data for specific population groups (e.g., First Nations people, Métis and Inuit, immigrants, language groups) and for detailed or small geographies.Footnote 3 The long-form questionnaire was sent to approximately 1 in 5 Canadian households for the 1991, 1996, 2001, and 2006 censuses and 1 in 4 Canadian households for the 2016 and 2021 censuses. This questionnaire complements the short-form questionnaire and aims to provide more detailed information about people in Canada by demographic, social and economic characteristics. Only individuals included in the census long-form sample data were eligible for inclusion in the CanCHECs.

2011 National Household Survey

The 2011 National Household SurveyFootnote 4 (NHS) was a voluntary survey that was sent to approximately 1 in 3 Canadian households. This questionnaire collected the following information: education, training and learning; families, households and housing; immigration and ethnocultural diversity; income, pensions, spending and wealth; Indigenous peoples; labour; languages; population and demography; society and community. Only individuals included in the 2011 NHS data were eligible for inclusion in the 2011 CanCHEC.

Health outcome data

Canadian Vital Statistics — Death database

The Canadian Vital Statistics — Death databaseFootnote 5 (CVSD) is an administrative survey that collects demographic and cause of death information annually from all provincial and territorial vital statistics registries on all deaths in Canada. Death data are received from the province or territory where the death occurred. Cause of death information is coded using the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems (ICD). The CanCHECs include only the deaths for the cohort members (i.e., not all deaths reported in the CVSD) and the mortality follow-up period varies by CanCHEC cycle. Death data for Yukon are not available as of 2017.

Canadian Cancer Registry

The Canadian Cancer RegistryFootnote 6 (CCR) is a national, dynamic, population-based registry that includes information about each new primary cancer diagnosed in cohort members since 1992. The CanCHECs include only the incident cancer cases for the cohort members, i.e., not all incident cancer cases reported to the CCR; the cancer incidence follow-up period and the jurisdictional coverage both vary by CanCHEC cycle.

Discharge Abstract Database

The Discharge Abstract DatabaseFootnote 7 (DAD) includes administrative, clinical, and demographic information on hospital discharges (including deaths, sign-outs and transfers) for all provinces and territories, except Quebec. Some provinces and territories also use the DAD to capture day surgery. Only the 2006, 2011 and 2016 CanCHECs include DAD records. The data availability by fiscal year (April 1 to March 31) may vary by CanCHEC cycle.

National Ambulatory Care Reporting System

The National Ambulatory Care Reporting SystemFootnote 8 (NACRS) contains data for hospital-based and community-based ambulatory care including day surgery, outpatient and community-based clinics, and emergency departments. Client visit data are collected at time of service in the participating facilities from several jurisdictions. Only the 2006, 2011 and 2016 CanCHECs include NACRS records. The data availability by fiscal year (April 1 to March 31) may vary by CanCHEC cycle.

Ontario Mental Health Reporting System

The Ontario Mental Health Reporting SystemFootnote 9 (OMHRS) contains data on individuals receiving adult mental health services from participating hospitals in Ontario, as well as from three facilities in Newfoundland and Labrador and one facility in Manitoba. OMHRS includes information about mental and physical health, social supports and service use, as well as care planning, outcome measurement, quality improvement and case-mix funding applications. Only the 2016 CanCHEC includes OMHRS records; these span from April 1, 2006 to March 31, 2022 (based on the assessment reference date).

Mobility data

Historical postal codes

Income tax returns are the principal data source for the historical postal codes file. Postal codes from the mailing addresses provided by tax filers when submitting their T1 tax file were extracted and used to estimate a person's place of residence for that reference year. Note that for some tax filers, the mailing addresses used for filing T1 tax records may not be associated with their place of residence.Footnote 10 In some cases, there are records with incomplete postal code information, e.g., for individuals who have left the country, or those who have not filed a tax form. An imputed postal codes file is available for researchers who require complete postal code histories.Footnote 11

CanCHEC summary

  1991 CanCHEC 1996 CanCHEC 2001 CanCHEC 2006 CanCHEC 2011 CanCHEC 2016 CanCHEC 2021 CanCHEC
Data source 1991 mandatory census long-form  1996 mandatory census long-form  2001 mandatory census long-form  2006 mandatory census long-form  2011 voluntary NHS 2016 mandatory census long-form  2021 mandatory census long-form
Number of cohort members 2.6 million 3.6 million 3.5 million 5.9 million 6.5 million 8.4 million 8.7 million
Minimum age (years) of cohort members on census day 25 19 19 0 0 0 0
Years of available annual postal codesTable note a 1981 to 2016 1981 to 2016 1981 to 2016 1981 to 2019 1981 to 2019 1981 to 2020 1981 to 2022
Years of follow-up for mortalityTable note b 1991 to 2016 1996 to 2016 2001 to 2016 2006 to 2019 2011 to 2019 2016 to 2021 2021 to 2022
Years of follow-up for cancer incidenceTable note c, d, e 1992 to 2015 1992 to 2015 1992 to 2015 1992 to 2015 1992 to 2015 1992 to 2021  
Years of follow-up for hospital dischargesTable note f       2000–2001 to 2016–2017 2000–2001 to 2016–2017 2000–2001 to 2021–2022  
Years of follow-up for ambulatory careTable note g       2002–2003 to 2017–2018 2002–2003 to 2017–2018 2002–2003 to 2021–2022  
Years of follow-up for mental health outcomesh           2006–2007 to 2021–2022  

Table notes

Table note *

Postal code history is not available for all cohort members and some restrictions were applied.

Return to table note a
referrer

Table note **

Data for Yukon are not available as of 2017.

Return to table note b
referrer

Table note ***

Data for Quebec are not available for diagnosis years after 2010 in the 1991 to 2011 CanCHECs. For the 2016 CanCHEC, data for Quebec are not available for diagnosis years after 2017.

Return to table note c
referrer

Table note ****

Data for Nova Scotia are not available for the 2020 and 2021 diagnosis years in the 2016 CanCHEC.

Return to table note d
referrer

Data for Newfoundland and Labrador are excluded for the diagnosis year 2021 in the 2016 CanCHEC.

Return to table note e
referrer

Hospital discharge data are not available on this data set for Quebec (all fiscal years) and for Nunavut in 2002–2003.

Return to table note f
referrer

For details on the jurisdictional coverage, please refer to the Data Quality Documentation, available under the "Data Quality" section of the NACRS Metadata website8

Return to table note g
referrer

Mental health assessment data are available on individuals receiving adult mental health services from participating hospitals in Ontario, as well as from three facilities in Newfoundland and Labrador and one facility in Manitoba.

 

Return to table note h
referrer

Planned evaluation coverage 2025-26 to 2029-30

Planned evaluation coverage 2025-26 to 2029-30Footnote 1
Program 2025-26 Total program spending (dollarsFootnote 2) Evaluations planned in the next 5 years Fiscal year of approvalFootnote 3 Rationale for not evaluating Program or spending
Economic and Environment Statistics 185,915,336 Evaluation of the Macroeconomic Accounts Statistics Program 2028-29 Not applicable
Evaluation of the Industry Statistics Program 2026-27
Evaluation of the Prices Program 2030-31 or later
Evaluation of the Census of EnvironmentFootnote 4 2027-28
Socio-economic Statistics 177,097,498 Evaluation of the Justice and Community Safety Statistics Program 2025-26 Not applicable
Evaluation of the Quality of Life Statistics Framework 2026-27
Evaluation of the Education Statistics Program 2025-26
Evaluation of the Labour Statistics Program 2029-30
Evaluation of Housing Statistics 2027-28
Evaluation of the Centre for Indigenous Statistics and Partnerships 2026-27
Evaluation of the Disaggregated Data Action Plan 2025-26
Evaluation of the Health Care Access, Experiences and Related Outcomes Program 2027-28
Evaluation of the Health Statistics Program 2029-30
Censuses 177,842,770 Evaluation of the 2026 Census of Population 2029-30 Not applicable
Evaluation of the 2026 Census of Agriculture 2028-29
Cost-Recovered Statistical Services 13,770,000 None planned Not applicable Cost-recovery activities are normally covered as part of program specific evaluations and through thematic evaluations. In addition, there was an evaluation line of evidence included in the Audit of Cost Recovery (2018).
Centres of Expertise 173,957,385 Evaluation of Statistical Geomatics 2028-29 Not applicable
Internal Services 99,325,542 None planned Not applicable Not applicable

An Integrated Crop Yield Model Using Remote Sensing, Agroclimatic Data and Crop Insurance Data

1. Introduction

This report provides the background, general methods and results on an extended approach in the use of remote sensing, agroclimatic and provincial crop insurance data to model reliable early-season and mid-season crop yield estimates as part of the Crop Reporting Series at Statistics Canada. This work builds on the original modelling process which replaced the crop yield estimation from the September Farm Survey in 2016.

2. General methodology for crop yield modelling

The extended methodology for modelling crop yield was developed and tested on the crops grown in Manitoba. Statistics Canada was able to adapt the existing yield model as a result of an agreement between Statistics Canada and the Manitoba Agricultural Services Corporation (MASC) whereby historical and current year crop insurance data at the parcel level was provided, in confidence, to Statistics Canada to assist in the modelling of current year crop yields.

3. Data sources used in the model

The modelling methodology used three data sources: 1) the coarse resolution satellite data used as part of Statistics Canada's Crop Condition Assessment Program; 2) agroclimatic data, and 3) MASC crop insurance data. A description of the first two data sets as well as the processing and extraction methods can be found in greater detail in the report referenced earlier. Only the changes incorporated in this extended yield model will be highlighted in this report.

3.1 Normalized Difference Vegetation Index

A spectral vegetation index, the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI), was used as a surrogate for photosynthetic potential of crops. One main difference between the original yield model and the extended yield model was the utilization of the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) imagery used to calculate the NDVI values. The previous satellite dataset had a pixel resolution of 1 kilometer whereas the MODIS data have a pixel resolution of 250 meters. The greater resolution of the MODIS data provides a 16 fold increase in the number of image pixels compared to the previous satellite imagery used, which is essential for the geographic level required for this methodology. Both of these NDVI datasets are released on a weekly basis throughout the growing season (mid-April to mid-October) via Statistics Canada's Crop Condition Assessment Program (CCAP). MODIS data go back to year 2000.

3.2 Agroclimatic indexes

The station-based daily temperature and precipitation data used in the model were provided by Environment Canada and other partner institutions and were used to generate the climate-based predictors. To form a manageable array of potential crop yield predictors, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada aggregated the daily agroclimatic indexes into monthly sums and means for the months of May to August and provided the aggregated data to Statistics Canada for use within the yield model.

3.3 Crop Insurance Data

Historical crop insurance data from 2000 – 2018 were provided to Statistics Canada by MASC. This dataset included the seeded area, harvested area, and yield at the parcel level for all crops insured by farm operators within Manitoba. The 2019 dataset included only the seeded area at the parcel level for all crops insured. These data are of excellent quality and aid substantially in the development of the extended yield model.

4. Modelling Survey Yields

4.1 Modelling Methods

The crop yields are estimated through the use of a robust multivariate linear model. The model is constructed using the historical relationships between the yields reported to MASC by the farm operator at the end of the growing season (the dependent variable in the model) and the NDVI and agroclimatic measurements taken at different times during the growing season as well as a temporal variable to account for overall changes in yield throughout the years. Data from the previous ten growing seasons are used in deriving the model.

The unit used in the model is the individual parcel as reported to MASC. The largest such parcels are at the quarter section level, representing 160 acres of land. The model estimates the crop yield for an individual parcel of land. This yield is then weighted according to the amount of seeded land in the parcel as reported at the start of the growing season to MASC by the farm operator to derive an initial estimate of yield at the provincial level. Only parcels with at least 145 acres of a single crop are used in the model. An additional adjustment is then made to the modelled estimate to account for smaller parcels. See the section titled Adjustment to Initial Estimates for more details.

Due to the vast number of available NDVI and agroclimatic readings available, it was unreasonable to include all variables in the model. The selection of the variables to be retained in the model was done using the GLMSELECT procedure in SAS with the LASSO (Least Absolute Shrinkage and Selection Operator) option. With a few exceptions, a minimum of five variables was required for the model and the final set of variables to be retained was determined using the Schwarz Bayesian Information Criterion method.

There are more data points available for more common crops. In the case of the most common crops, individual models were constructed at the sub-provincial ecological level and then aggregated to the provincial level. There are seven such ecological regions in Manitoba. They were derived from clusters of ecodistricts (Terrestrial ecodistricts of Canada). Crop yields are influenced by different factors like climate, physiography and soil types for which these regions are suitable to characterize. For less common crops, the model was constructed at the provincial level. See Appendix A for a listing of each crop and the geographic level at which the model was constructed.

4.2 Adjustment to Initial Estimates

The model was constructed using insured parcels of land where a single crop of at least 145 acres was seeded. This allows an accurate assignment of NDVI to the crop being grown. The results coming directly from the model represent the estimated yield from these parcels. Thus, parcels of land which either were not insured or had less than 145 acres of a single crop were not directly included in the modelled estimates.

In the case of uninsured parcels of land, no adjustment was made to the estimates to account for them. This assumes that the yield from uninsured parcels of land is similar to that from the insured parcels with over 145 acres of a single crop. The amount of uninsured land has been estimated by comparing area information from 2016, 2017 and 2018 MASC files with area estimates from the Statistics Canada Field Crop Reporting Series by individual crop. See Appendix B for the estimates of the percentage of uninsured crops.

In the case of parcels of land which had less than 145 acres of a single crop, the historical crop insurance information can be used to compare the yields by crop from parcels with at least 145 acres to those with less. The estimates coming directly from the model can then be adjusted by the ratio of these two values, weighted by the area seeded in the current year. The ratio was calculated using ten years of observations from historical crop insurance files. See Appendix C for the average ratio of the yield of the two sizes of fields by crop and the standard error of these ratios over the past ten years.

4.3 Comparison of Modelled Crop Yields with Other Yield Indicators

During the development cycle of the model, numerous model parameters were studied. This included the number of years of historical data to use in the model, the level at which the model was constructed (provincial or ecological level), the manner in which the predictor variables were selected for the model, the definition of a parcel of land, the methods for adjusting the values coming from the model to better represent the entire population of crop producers and other factors.

One manner of evaluating the success of the model was to compare the results with other statistics which measure crop yield. For the purpose of this study, two data sources were examined

  • The crop yields reported to MASC by the farm operators at the end of the year
  • The results from Statistics Canada's Field Crop Reporting Series surveys.

Statistics Canada measures crop yields at three points in the growing season

  • Early-season estimates, using a survey which takes place in July, referred to as the July survey
  • Mid-season estimates, using a survey which takes place in early September, referred to as the September survey
  • End of season estimates, using a survey which takes place in late October.

As part of its evaluation, the crop yield model was used to produce both early-season and mid-season crop yield estimates

Nine sets of early-season and mid-season crop yield estimates (representing crop years 2010 to 2018) were produced using the model and compared to the results from the other data sources by crop when possibleFootnote 1. A relative difference measurement, relative to the yield estimate from the crop insurance files was calculated for both the survey and modelled values.

relative differencemethod i=yield estimatemethod i-yield estimatecrop insuranceyield estimatecrop insurance

where method i is either the modelled yield estimate or the survey yield estimate.

Three statistics based on the relative difference were produced for each crop

  • The average relative difference across the nine years
  • The average of the absolute value of the relative difference across the nine years
  • The maximum absolute relative difference across the nine years.

5. Results

The results are presented in Table 1 for early-season estimates and those for mid-season are presented in Table 2.

The September survey estimates only cover the 2010 to 2015 period since the survey was cancelled in 2016.

Table 1: Comparison of the relative differences with the crop insurance yield estimates for early-season yield estimates from the July survey and the model (2010-2018)
    Average Relative Difference Average Absolute Relative Difference Maximum Absolute Relative Difference
Crop 2018 Seeded Area (acres) July survey (%) Modelled values (%) July survey (%) Modelled values (%) July survey (%) Modelled values (%)
Barley 324,000 2.0 1.6 12.5 10.8 35.6 25.9
Buckwheat 5,400 31.4 -10.1 31.4 22.4 52.7 36.9
Canary seed -12.4 -1.0 28.9 18.0 77.1 67.2
Canola (rapeseed) 3,416,000 -9.8 1.2 13.2 9.7 23.9 31.2
Corn for grain 421,000 -12.7 5.5 13.2 10.1 22.0 30.6
Peas, dry 85,000 -7.0 -0.5 12.9 12.3 30.7 22.4
Faba beans 7.7 -1.7 24.7 11.6 51.1 36.2
Flaxseed 37,500 2.6 3.7 12.3 11.7 23.3 37.3
Hemp 11,300 ... -4.0 ... 14.4 ... 28.4
Lentils 2,000 ... 111.3 ... 111.3 ... 164.5
Mustard seed 4,900 ... 33.3 ... 52.2 ... 90.4
Oats 484,900 -7.5 -1.4 11.2 7.8 19.8 15.8
Beans, dry coloured 105,800 -8.8 7.2 10.4 13.9 22.7 32.3
Rye, fall remaining 42,300 0.5 -2.0 15.0 14.8 34.6 24.8
Soybeans 1,890,000 -7.3 2.7 11.2 12.0 17.3 30.1
Sunflower seed 60,000 -6.4 4.0 13.9 14.0 31.6 27.9
Beans, dry white 30,100 -13.2 3.0 17.0 16.8 35.1 32.0
Wheat, durum 1.7 -14.4 38.0 27.0 110.0 47.0
Wheat, Canada Western Red Spring 2,590,000 -12.6 -6.3 12.6 9.7 28.1 27.2
Wheat, other spring 20,900 -20.3 -2.8 25.6 15.8 68.4 31.1
Wheat, Canada Prairie Spring Red and Canada Prairie Spring White 51,000 -6.1 -9.0 18.4 15.3 42.0 33.6
Wheat, winter remaining 41,000 -1.9 2.5 6.1 7.2 10.2 19.8
Table 2: Comparison of the relative differences with the crop insurance yield estimates for mid-season yield estimates from the September survey and the model (2010-2018)Footnote 2Footnote 3
    Average Relative Difference Average Absolute Relative Difference Maximum Absolute Relative Difference
Crop 2018 Seeded Area (acres) September survey (%) Modelled values (%) September survey (%) Modelled values (%) September survey (%) Modelled values (%)
Barley 324,000 0.2 -3.3 6.5 11.1 16.0 22.1
Buckwheat 5,400 ... -5.7 ... 18.5 ... 35.9
Canary seed ... -1.7 ... 17.3 ... 59.2
Canola (rapeseed) 3,416,000 -11.4 -3.3 11.4 10.3 16.3 22.0
Corn for grain 421,000 -15.3 2.4 15.3 11.5 28.6 32.1
Peas, dry 85,000 0.9 -1.2 5.9 12.6 17.1 26.3
Faba beans ... 1.1 ... 9.9 ... 31.7
Flaxseed 37,500 -2.0 3.4 5.9 11.7 9.6 32.8
Hemp 11,300 ... -7.4 ... 11.6 ... 34.2
Lentils 2,000 ... 72.9 ... 89.4 ... 164.5
Mustard seed 4,900 ... 51.3 ... 59.7 ... 127.7
Oats 484,900 -7.5 0.7 7.6 8.3 12.8 14.8
Beans, dry coloured 105,800 ... 4.9 ... 8.5 ... 22.5
Rye, fall remaining 42,300 1.9 -2.3 11.7 17.4 20.3 27.0
Soybeans 1,890,000 -8.4 0.6 8.4 11.9 19.3 24.7
Sunflower seed 60,000 ... 1.0 ... 22.1 ... 41.1
Beans, dry white 30,100 ... -4.9 ... 11.3 ... 33.0
Wheat, durum ... -15.8 ... 25.7 ... 47.0
Wheat, Canada Western Red Spring 2,590,000 -9.3 -8.3 9.3 8.6 17.1 25.2
Wheat, other spring 20,900 -9.3 -3.8 9.3 13.7 17.1 32.5
Wheat, Canada Prairie Spring Red and Canada Prairie Spring White 51,000 -9.3 -4.2 9.3 11.3 17.1 30.9
Wheat, winter remaining 41,000 -0.9 1.6 2.9 9.7 5.9 23.9

Overall, the model compares favourably to the results of the July and September surveys, especially for the more common crops in Manitoba such as canola, spring wheat and soybeans. The average relative differences and average absolute relative differences from the model are, in general, of better quality compared to those from the survey.

The value of the relative difference itself shows the percentage difference between the model and the crop insurance values. On average the relative differences are quite good for many cases, but it is important to note that a good average can consist of a large positive value with a similarly large negative value. The absolute values show that there may be an important difference between the two estimates at any one point in time. The maximum shows that this can be quite large in some situations.

6. Data Quality Indicator – the Coefficient of Variation:

Since the parcel level yield values are estimates from a model, they are subject to error. One indicator that can be used to measure the degree of possible error, and therefore the degree of uncertainty in the estimates is the coefficient of variation or CV. In the case of the yield model, the variability is measured based on the standard error of the individual predicted values i.e. the error in the prediction at the parcel level. Note that the modelled CVs are calculated in a different manner to those from a survey and are not directly comparable. The model CVs can be considered to be a conservative estimate of the true variability, that is, an upper bound. In fact the true CV may be lower. Table 3 shows the average CVs for each crop from the 2010-2018 tests.

Table 3: Average estimated CVs from the model for different crops (2010-2018)
Crop Early-season Estimate Average CV (%) Mid-season Estimate Average CV (%)
Barley 20.0 21.0
Buckwheat 61.5 59.6
Canary seed 33.2 33.3
Canola (rapeseed) 19.4 20.0
Corn for grain 14.3 14.6
Peas, dry 26.0 26.1
Faba beans 35.3 31.3
Flaxseed 25.5 25.5
Hemp 44.5 46.4
Lentils 19.0 24.0
Mustard seed 59.6 48.5
Oats 20.9 20.3
Beans, dry coloured 24.1 24.4
Rye, fall remaining 27.9 27.5
Soybeans 18.5 18.7
Sunflower seed 26.0 27.4
Beans, dry white 21.9 23.0
Wheat, durum 33.3 33.4
Wheat, Canada Western Red Spring 17.8 18.1
Wheat, other spring 18.9 19.0
Wheat, Canada Prairie Spring Red and Canada Prairie Spring White 27.1 25.8
Wheat, winter remaining 17.4 17.6
Note that the CVs do not account for any variability related to the adjustment factor for smaller parcels.

7. Release Criteria

A set of rules were established to determine which modelled yields are of an acceptable level of quality to publish. These rules are based on the success of the robust multivariate linear model and the resulting CV calculated for each modelled estimate. These rules are applied to each crop and differ slightly depending on whether the model was constructed at the provincial or ecological level.

Firstly, it is possible that an estimate may not be generated by the model. This is most likely to occur with rare crops. It may result because there are less than 50 parcels of land in the historical database with which to build the model or because no mathematical solution can be found to run the model.

Secondly, if the CV of the provincial estimate from the model is greater than 35%, the estimate is not published.

Finally, there was an additional rule for crops which are modelled at the ecological level. The provincial estimate for a crop will not be published if the total seeded area from ecological regions that do not meet the previous set of conditions exceeds 10% of the provincial seeded area for the crop. In such cases, the model may be rerun at the provincial level to obtain a provincial estimate.

Appendix A: Geographic Level at which the Crop Yield Models were Constructed

The following table indicates the geographic level at which the crop yield models were constructed. In general, less common crops were modelled at the provincial level while more common crops were modelled at the ecological level.
Crop Geographic Level of Modelling
Barley Ecological regions
Buckwheat Provincial
Canary seed Provincial
Canola (rapeseed) Ecological regions
Corn for grain Ecological regions
Peas, dry Provincial
Faba beans Provincial
Flaxseed Ecological regions
Hemp Provincial
Lentils Provincial
Mustard seed Provincial
Oats Ecological regions
Beans, dry coloured Ecological regions
Rye, fall remaining Provincial
Soybeans Ecological regions
Sunflower seed Provincial
Beans, dry white Ecological regions
Wheat, durum Provincial
Wheat, Canada Western Red Spring Ecological regions
Wheat, other spring Ecological regions
Wheat, Canada Prairie Spring Red and Canada Prairie Spring White Provincial
Wheat, winter remaining Ecological regions

Appendix B: Percentage of Crop Area not insured through Crop Insurance

The following table presents estimates by crop of the percentage of cropland that is not insured. No adjustments are made to the modelled estimates for these uninsured crops. It is assumed that their yield is similar to that coming from insured fields. The percentages were estimated by comparing the area of insured land by crop as reported on the 2016 through 2018 MASC files with the estimated crop area from Statistics Canada's Field Crop Reporting Series.
Crop Estimated Percentage of Uninsured Crop Area (%)Footnote 4
Barley 13.4
Buckwheat 10.2
Canary seed
Canola (rapeseed) 3.1
Corn for grain 8.5
Peas, dry 1.8
Faba beans 9.0
Flaxseed 13.8
Hemp
Lentils 15.8
Mustard seed
Oats 14.8
Beans, dry coloured 8.8
Rye, fall remaining 9.5
Soybeans 1.3
Sunflower seed 10.0
Beans, dry white 8.8
Wheat, durum
Wheat, Canada Western Red Spring 6.0
Wheat, other spring 6.0
Wheat, Canada Prairie Spring Red and Canada Prairie Spring White 6.0
Wheat, winter remaining 15.4

Appendix C: Ratio of the Yields between Small and Large Parcels of Insured Land

The following table presents estimates of the ratio of the yields from smaller fields (less than 145 acres of a single crop within a parcel of land) with those from larger fields (at least 145 acres of a single crop within a parcel of land). A value of less than one indicates that the smaller fields have a lower yield than that from larger fields. These values were calculated using ten years of MASC information and the ratio represents the average of the annual ratio over the ten years. The variance of the estimate is also provided as an indication of the stability of this ratio over time.
Crop Estimated Ratio of Yield of Smaller to Larger Fields Variance
Barley 0.88 0.0007
Buckwheat 1.04 0.0430
Canary seed 0.94 0.0189
Canola (rapeseed) 0.96 0.0003
Corn for grain 0.99 0.0007
Peas, dry 0.90 0.0021
Faba beans 0.92 0.0403
Flaxseed 0.94 0.0042
Hemp 0.98 0.0147
Lentils 1.13 0.5358
Mustard seed 1.35 0.5556
Oats 0.83 0.0025
Beans, dry coloured 1.04 0.0035
Rye, fall remaining 0.92 0.0013
Soybeans 0.97 0.0003
Sunflower seed 0.95 0.0022
Beans, dry white 1.00 0.0045
Wheat, durum 1.01 0.0916
Wheat, Canada Western Red Spring 0.92 0.0003
Wheat, other spring 0.95 0.0053
Wheat, Canada Prairie Spring Red and Canada Prairie Spring White 1.05 0.0295
Wheat, winter remaining 0.93 0.0007

Integrated Business Statistics Program (IBSP)

Reporting Guide

This guide is designed to assist you as you complete the 2018 Annual Survey of Research and Development in Canadian Industry. If you need more information, please call the Statistics Canada Help Line at the number below.

Help Line: 1-800-972-9692

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.

Note:

  1. If this business performs in-house research and development (R&D) and outsources R&D, complete all questions.
  2. If this business performs in-house (R&D) and does not outsource R&D, complete questions 1-5, 8-19.
  3. If this business outsources (R&D) and does not perform in-house R&D, complete questions 1-3, 5-7, 12, 16-19.
  4. If this business does not perform in-house (R&D) and does not outsource R&D, complete questions 1-3, 5, 12, 16, 17 & 19.

Difference between Scientific Research and Experimental Development (SR&ED) tax incentive program and this survey

Include the following in this survey:

  • capital R&D expenditures
  • R&D expenditures in the social sciences and humanities
  • payments for R&D performed by other organizations outside Canada.

For this survey

'In-house R&D' refers to

Expenditures within Canada for R&D performed within this business by:

  • employees (permanent, temporary or casual)
  • self-employed individuals or contractors who are working on-site on this business's R&D projects.

'Outsourced R&D' refers to

Payments made within or outside Canada to other organizations, companies or individuals to fund R&D performance:

  • grants
  • fellowships
  • contracts.

Reporting period information

Here are some examples of common fiscal periods that fall within the targeted dates:

  • May 1, 2017 to April 30, 2018
  • July 1, 2017 to June 30, 2018
  • October 1, 2017 to September 30, 2018
  • January 1, 2018 to December 31, 2018
  • February 1, 2018 to January 31, 2019
  • April 1, 2018 to March 31, 2019

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

  • September 18, 2017 to September 15, 2018 (e.g., floating year-end)
  • June 1, 2018 to December 31, 2018 (e.g., a newly opened business)

Definitions and Concepts

Research and experimental development (R&D) 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 is performed in the natural sciences, engineering, social sciences and humanities. There are three types of R&D activities: basic research, applied research and experimental development.

Activities included and excluded from R&D

Inclusions

Prototypes

Include design, construction and operation of prototypes, provided that the primary objective is to make further improvements or to undertake technical testing. Exclude if the prototype is for commercial purposes.

Clinical Trials

Include clinical trial phases 1, 2, and 3. Include clinical trial phase 4 only if it brings about a further scientific or technological advance. 

Pilot plants

Include construction and operation of pilot plants, provided that the primary objective is to make further improvements or to undertake technical testing. Exclude if the pilot plant is intended to be operated for commercial purposes.

New computer software or significant improvements/modifications to existing computer software

Includes technological or scientific advances in theoretical computer sciences; operating systems e.g., improvement in interface management, developing new operating system or converting an existing operating system to a significantly different hardware environment, programming languages, and applications if a significant technological change occurs.

Contracts

Include all contracts which require R&D. For contracts which include other work, report only the R&D costs.

Research work in the social sciences

Include if projects are employing new or significantly different modelling techniques or developing new formulae, analyzing data not previously available or applying new research techniques, development of community strategies for disease prevention, analysis of the effectiveness of health interventions, or health education.

Exclude:

  • routine analytical projects using standard techniques and existing data
  • routine market research
  • routine statistical analysis intended for on-going monitoring of an activity.

Exclusions

Routine analysis in the social sciences including policy-related studies, management studies and efficiency studies

Exclude analytical projects of a routine nature, with established methodologies, principles and models of the related social sciences to bear on a particular problem (e.g., commentary on the probable economic effects of a change in the tax structure, using existing economic data; 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).

Consumer surveys, advertising, market research

Exclude projects of a routine nature, with established methodologies intended for commercialization of the results of R&D.

Routine quality control and testing

Exclude projects of a routine nature, with established methodologies not intended to create new knowledge, even if carried out by personnel normally engaged in R&D.

Pre-production activities such as demonstration of commercial viability, tooling up, trial production, and trouble shooting

Although R&D may be required as a result of these steps, these activities are excluded.

Prospecting, exploratory drilling, development of mines, oil or gas wells

Include only if for R&D projects concerned with new equipment or techniques in these activities, such as in-situ and tertiary recovery research.

Engineering

Exclude engineering unless it is in direct support of R&D.

Design and drawing

Exclude design and drawing unless it is in direct support of R&D.

Patent and license work

Exclude all administrative and legal work connected with patents and licenses.

Cosmetic modifications or style changes to existing products

Exclude if no significant technical improvement or modification to the existing products has occurred.

General purpose or routine data collection

Exclude projects of a routine nature, with established methodologies intended for on-going monitoring of an activity.

Routine computer programming, systems maintenance or software application

Exclude projects of a routine nature, with established methodologies intended to support on-going operations.

Routine mathematical or statistical analysis or operations analysis

Exclude projects of a routine nature, with established methodologies intended for on-going monitoring of an activity.

Activities associated with standards compliance

Exclude projects of a routine nature, with established methodologies intended to support standards compliance.

Specialized routine medical care such as routine pathology services

Exclude projects of a routine nature, with established methodologies intended for on-going monitoring of an activity where results do not further scientific, technological advance, or understanding of the effectiveness of a technology.

In-house R&D expenditures within Canada (Q4 - Q7)

In-house R&D expenditures are composed of current in-house R&D expenditures and capital in-house R&D expenditures.

Current in-house R&D expenditures

Include:

  • wages, salaries, benefits and fringe benefits, materials and supplies
  • services to support R&D, including on-site R&D consultants and contactors
  • necessary background literature
  • minor scientific equipment
  • associated administrative overhead costs.

a. Wages, salaries of permanent, temporary and casual R&D employees

Include benefits and fringe benefits of employees engaged in R&D activities. Benefits and fringe benefits include bonus payments, holiday or vacation pay, pension fund contributions, other social security payments, payroll taxes, etc.

b. Services to support R&D

Include:

  • payments to on-site R&D consultants and contractors working under the direct control of your business
  • other services including indirect services purchased to support in-house R&D such as security, storage, repair, maintenance and use of buildings and equipment
  • computer services, software licensing fees and dissemination of R&D findings.

c. R&D materials

Include:

  • water, fuel, gas and electricity
  • materials for creation of prototypes
  • reference materials (books, journals, etc.)
  • subscriptions to libraries and data bases, memberships to scientific societies, etc.
  • cost of outsourced (contracted out or granted) small R&D prototypes or R&D models
  • materials for laboratories (chemicals, animals, etc.)
  • all other R&D-related materials.

d. All other current R&D costs including overhead

Include administrative and overhead costs (e.g., office, lease/rent, post and telecommunications, internet, legal expenditures, insurance), prorated if necessary to allow for non-R&D activities within the business.

Exclude:

  • interest charges
  • value-added taxes (goods and services tax (GST) or harmonized sales tax (HST)).

Capital in-house R&D expenditures

Capital in-house R&D expenditures are the annual gross amount paid for the acquisition of fixed assets that are used repeatedly, or continuously in the performance of R&D for more than one year. Report capital in-house R&D expenditures in full for the period when they occurred.

Include costs for software, land, buildings and structures, equipment, machinery and other capital costs.

Exclude capital depreciation.

e. Software

Include applications and systems software (original, customized and off-the-shelf software), supporting documentation and other software-related acquisitions.

f. Land acquired for R&D including testing grounds, sites for laboratories and pilot plants.

g. Buildings and structures that are constructed or purchased for R&D activities or that have undergone major improvements, modifications, renovations and repairs for R&D activities.

h. Equipment, machinery and all other capital

Include major equipment, machinery and instruments, including embedded software, acquired for R&D activities.

Outsourced (contracted out or granted) R&D expenditures (Q8 - Q11)

Include payments made through contracts, licenses, grants donations, endowments and fellowships to another company, university, hospital, consortia, organization or individual to purchase or fund R&D activities.

Exclude expenditures for on-site R&D contractors.

  1. Parent and subsidiary companies are companies connected to each other through majority ownership of the subsidiary company by the parent company. Affiliated companies are companies connected to a parent through minority ownership of the affiliated companies by the parent.
  2. Companies include all incorporated for-profit businesses and government business enterprises providing products in the market at market rates.
  3. Private non-profit organizations include voluntary health organizations, private philanthropic foundations, associations, consortia, accelerators, and societies and research institutes. They are not-for-profit organizations that serve the public interest by supporting activities related to public welfare (such as health, education, the environment).
  4. Industrial research institutes or associations include all non-profit organizations that serve the business sector, with industrial associations frequently consisting of their membership.
  5. Universities include hospitals and clinics when they are affiliated with a university and provide education services or when R&D activity is under the direct control of a university.
  6. Federal government includes all federal government departments and agencies. It excludes federal government business enterprises providing products in the market.
  7. Provincial or territorial governments include all provincial or territorial government ministries, departments and agencies. It excludes provincial or territorial government business enterprises providing products in the market.
  8. Provincial or territorial research organizations are organizations created under provincial or territorial law which conduct or facilitate research on behalf of the province or territory.
  9. Other organizations – individuals, non-university educational institutions, for profit accelerators and incubators foreign governments including ministries, departments and agencies of foreign governments.

Sources of funds for in-house R&D expenditures in 2018 (Q16)

Include Canadian and foreign sources.

Exclude:

  • payments for outsourced (contracted out or granted) R&D, which should be reported in question 9
  • capital depreciation.
a. Funds from this business
Amount contributed by this business to R&D performed within Canada (include amounts eligible for income tax purposes, e.g., Scientific Research and Experimental Development (SR&ED) program, other amounts spent for projects not claimed through SR&ED, and funds for land, buildings, machinery and equipment (capital expenditures) purchased for R&D).
b. Funds from parent, affiliated and subsidiary companies
Amount received from parent, affiliated and subsidiary companies used to perform R&D within Canada (include amounts eligible for income tax purposes, e.g., Scientific Research and Experimental Development (SR&ED) program, other amounts spent for projects not claimed through SR&ED, and funds for land, buildings, machinery and equipment (capital expenditures) purchased for R&D).
c. Federal government grants or funding
Funds received from the federal government in support of R&D activities not connected to a specific contractual deliverable.
d. Federal government contracts
Funds received from the federal government in support of R&D activities connected to a specific contractual deliverable.
e. R&D contract work for other companies
Funds received from other companies to perform R&D on their behalf.
f. Provincial or territorial government grants or funding
Funds received from the provincial or territorial government in support of R&D activities not connected to a specific contractual deliverable.
g. Provincial or territorial government contracts
Funds received from the provincial or territorial government in support of R&D activities connected to a specific contractual deliverable.
h. R&D contract work for private non-profit organizations
Funds received from non-profit organizations to perform R&D on their behalf.
i. Other sources
Funds received from all other sources not previously classified.

In-house R&D expenditures by fields of research and development in 2018 (Q18)

Exclude:

  • payments for outsourced (contracted out or granted) R&D, which should be reported in question 9
  • capital depreciation.

Natural and formal sciences

Mathematics, physical sciences, chemical sciences, earth and related environmental sciences, biological sciences, other natural sciences.

Exclude computer sciences, information sciences and bioinformatics (to be reported at lines s and t).

  1. Mathematics: pure mathematics, applied mathematics, statistics and probability.
  2. Physical sciences: atomic, molecular and chemical physics, interaction with radiation, magnetic resonances, condensed matter physics, solid state physics and superconductivity, particles and fields physics, nuclear physics, fluids and plasma physics (including surface physics), optics (including laser optics and quantum optics), acoustics, astronomy (including astrophysics, space science).
  3. Chemical sciences: organic chemistry, inorganic and nuclear chemistry, physical chemistry, polymer science and plastics, electrochemistry (dry cells, batteries, fuel cells, metal corrosion, electrolysis), colloid chemistry, analytical chemistry.
  4. Earth and related environmental sciences: geosciences, geophysics, mineralogy and palaeontology, geochemistry and geophysics, physical geography, geology and volcanology, environmental sciences, meteorology, atmospheric sciences and climatic research, oceanography, hydrology and water resources.
  5. Biological sciences: cell biology, microbiology and virology, biochemistry, molecular biology and biochemical research, mycology, biophysics, genetics and heredity (medical genetics under medical biotechnology), reproductive biology (medical aspects under medical biotechnology), developmental biology, plant sciences and botany, zoology, ornithology, entomology and behavioural sciences biology, marine biology, freshwater biology and limnology,  ecology and biodiversity conservation, biology (theoretical, thermal, cryobiology, biological rhythm), evolutionary biology.
  6. Other natural sciences: other natural sciences.

Engineering and Technology

Civil engineering, electrical engineering, electronic engineering and communications technology, mechanical engineering, chemical engineering, materials engineering, medical engineering, environmental engineering, environmental biotechnology, industrial biotechnology, nanotechnology, other engineering and technologies.

Exclude software engineering and technology (to be reported at line r).

  1. Civil engineering: civil engineering, architecture engineering, municipal and structural engineering, transport engineering.
  2. Electrical engineering, electronic engineering and communications technology: electrical and electronic engineering, robotics and automatic control, micro-electronics, semiconductors, automation and control systems, communication engineering and systems, telecommunications, computer hardware and architecture.
  3. Mechanical engineering: mechanical engineering, applied mechanics, thermodynamics, aerospace engineering, nuclear-related engineering (nuclear physics under Physical sciences), acoustical engineering, reliability analysis and non-destructive testing, automotive and transportation engineering and manufacturing, tooling, machinery and equipment engineering and manufacturing, heating, ventilation and air conditioning engineering and manufacturing.
  4. Chemical engineering: chemical engineering (plants, products), chemical process engineering.
  5. Materials engineering: materials engineering and metallurgy, ceramics, coating and films (including packaging and printing), plastics, rubber and composites (including laminates and reinforced plastics), paper and wood and textiles, construction materials (organic and inorganic).
  6. Medical engineering: medical and biomedical engineering, medical laboratory technology (excluding biomaterials, which should be reported under Industrial biotechnology).
  7. Environmental engineering: environmental and geological engineering, petroleum engineering (fuel, oils), energy and fuels, remote sensing, mining and mineral processing, marine engineering, sea vessels and ocean engineering.
  8. Environmental biotechnology: environmental biotechnology, bioremediation, diagnostic biotechnologies in environmental management (DNA chips and bio-sensing devices).
  9. Industrial biotechnology: industrial biotechnology, bioprocessing technologies, biocatalysis and fermentation bioproducts (products that are manufactured using biological material as feedstock), biomaterials (bioplastics, biofuels, bioderived bulk and fine chemicals, bio-derived materials).
  10. Nanotechnology: nano-materials (production and properties), nano-processes (applications on nano-scale).
  11. Other engineering and technologies: food and beverages, oenology, other engineering and technologies.

Software-related sciences and technology

Software engineering and technology, computer sciences, information technology and bioinformatics.

  1. Software engineering and technology: computer software engineering, computer software technology, and other related computer software engineering and technologies.
  2. Computer sciences: computer science, artificial intelligence, cryptography, and other related computer sciences.
  3. Information technology and bioinformatics: information technology, informatics, bioinformatics, biomathematics, and other related information technologies.

Medical and health sciences

Basic medicine, clinical medicine, health sciences, medical biotechnology, other medical sciences.

  1. Basic medicine: anatomy and morphology (plant science under Biological science), human genetics, immunology, neurosciences, pharmacology and pharmacy and medicinal chemistry, toxicology, physiology and cytology, pathology.
  2. Clinical medicine: andrology, obstetrics and gynaecology, paediatrics, cardiac and cardiovascular systems, haematology, anaesthesiology, orthopaedics, radiology and nuclear medicine, dentistry, oral surgery and medicine, dermatology, venereal diseases and allergy, rheumatology, endocrinology and metabolism and gastroenterology, urology and nephrology, and oncology.
  3. Health sciences: health care sciences and nursing, nutrition and dietetics, parasitology, infectious diseases and epidemiology, occupational health.
  4. Medical biotechnology: health-related biotechnology, technologies involving the manipulation of cells, tissues, organs or the whole organism, technologies involving identifying the functioning of DNA, proteins and enzymes, pharmacogenomics, gene-based therapeutics, biomaterials (related to medical implants, devices, sensors).
  5. Other medical sciences: forensic science, other medical sciences.

Agricultural Sciences

Agriculture, forestry and fisheries sciences, animal and dairy sciences, veterinary sciences, agricultural biotechnology, other agricultural sciences.

  1. Agriculture, forestry and fisheries sciences: agriculture, forestry, fisheries and aquaculture, soil science, horticulture, viticulture, agronomy, plant breeding and plant protection.
  2. Animal and dairy sciences: animal and dairy science, animal husbandry.
  3. Veterinary sciences: veterinary science (all).
  4. Agricultural biotechnology: agricultural biotechnology and food biotechnology, genetically modified (GM) organism technology and livestock cloning, diagnostics (DNA chips and biosensing devices), biomass feedstock production technologies and biopharming.
  5. Other agricultural sciences: other agricultural sciences.

Social sciences and humanities

Psychology, educational sciences, economics and business, other social sciences, humanities.

  1. Psychology: cognitive psychology and psycholinguistics, experimental psychology, psychometrics and quantitative psychology, and other fields of psychology.
  2. Educational sciences: education, training and other related educational sciences.
  3. Economics and business: micro-economics, macro-economics, econometrics, labour economics, financial economics, business economics, entrepreneurial and business administration, management and operations, management sciences, finance, pharmacoeconomics, and all other related fields of economics and business.
  4. Other social sciences: anthropology (social and cultural) and ethnology, demography, geography (human, economic and social), planning (town, city and country), management, organization and methods (excluding market research unless new methods/techniques are developed), law, linguistics, political sciences, sociology, miscellaneous social sciences and interdisciplinary, and methodological and historical science and technology activities relating to subjects in this group.
  5. Humanities: history (history, prehistory and history, together with auxiliary historical disciplines such as archaeology, numismatics, palaeography, genealogy, etc.), languages and literature (ancient and modern), other humanities (philosophy (including the history of science and technology)), arts (history of art, art criticism, painting, sculpture, musicology, dramatic art excluding artistic “research” of any kind), religion, theology, other fields and subjects pertaining to the humanities, and methodological, historical and other science and technology activities relating to the subjects in this group.

In-house R&D personnel in 2018 (Q70 - Q72)

R&D personnel

Include:

  • permanent, temporary and casual R&D employees
  • independent on-site R&D consultants and contractors working in your business’s offices, laboratories, or other facilities
  • employees engaged in R&D-related support activities.

Researchers and research managers are composed of:

  1. Scientists, social scientists, engineers and researchers are 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 may be certified by provincial or territorial educational authorities, provincial, territorial or national scientific or engineering associations.
  2. Senior research managers plan or manage R&D projects and programs. They may be certified by provincial or territorial educational authorities, provincial, territorial or national scientific or engineering associations.

R&D technical, administrative and support staff are composed of:

  1. Technicians and technologists and research assistants 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 participate in R&D by performing scientific and technical tasks involving the application of concepts, operational methods and the use of research equipment, normally under the supervision of researchers. They may be certified by provincial or territorial educational authorities, provincial, territorial or national scientific or engineering associations. 
  2. Other R&D technical, administrative support staff include skilled and unskilled craftsmen, and administrative, secretarial and clerical staff participating in R&D projects or directly associated with such projects.

On-site R&D consultants and contractors are individuals hired 1) to perform project-based work or to provide goods at a fixed or ascertained price or within a certain time or 2) to provide advice or services in a specialized field for a fee and, in both cases, work at the location specified and controlled by the contracting company or organization.

Full-time equivalent (FTE)

R&D may be carried out by persons who work solely on R&D projects or by persons who devote only part of their time to R&D, and the balance to other activities such as testing, quality control and production engineering. To arrive at the total effort devoted to R&D in terms of personnel, it is necessary to estimate the full-time equivalent of these persons working only part-time in R&D.

FTE (full-time equivalent): Number of persons who work solely on R&D projects + the time of persons working only part of their time on R&D.

Example calculation: If out of four scientists engaged in R&D work, one works solely on R&D projects and the remaining three devote only one quarter of their working time to R&D, then: FTE = 1 + 1/4 + 1/4 + 1/4 = 1.75 scientists.

Technology and technical assistant payments in 2018 (Q73 - Q75)

Definitions (equivalent to the Canadian Intellectual Property Office)

a. Patent
Government grant giving the right to exclude others from making, using or selling an invention.
b. Copyright
Legal protection for literary, artistic, dramatic or musical works, computer programs, performer’s performances, sound recordings, and communication signals.
c. Trademark
A word, symbol or design, or combination of these, used to distinguish goods or services of one person or organization from those of others in the marketplace.
d. Industrial design
Legal protection against imitation of the shape, pattern, or ornamentation of an object.
e. Integrated circuit topography
Three-dimensional configurations of the elements and interconnections embodied in an integrated circuit product.
f. Original software
Computer programs and descriptive materials for both systems and applications. Original software can be created in-house or outsourced and includes packaged software with customization.
g. Packaged or off-the-shelf software
Packaged software purchased for organizational use and excludes software with customization.
h. Databases
Data files organized to permit effective access and use of the data including access clinical trial registries and administrative health data for research purposes. Includes partnerships supporting the development of databases, such as patient or clinical trial registries or biobanks, to be used for research purposes (e.g., developing a national bladder cancer patient registry with Bladder Cancer Canada for future research).
i. Other
Technical assistance, industrial processes and know-how including technology transfer and know how such as batch pilot production, method develop, and validation related to technology or manufacturing transfer.

Energy-related R&D by area of technology (Q22 - Q69)

Fossil Fuels

Crude oils and natural gas exploration, crude oils and natural gas production, oil sands and heavy crude oils surface and sub-surface production and separation of the bitumen, tailings management, refining, processing and upgrading, coal production, separation and processing, transportation of fossil fuels.

a. Crude oils and natural gas exploration
Include development of advanced exploration methods (geophysical, geochemical, seismic, magnetic) for on-shore and off-shore prospecting.
b. Crude oil and natural gas production and storage, include enhanced recovery natural gas production
Include on-shore and off-shore deep drilling equipment and techniques for conventional oil and gas, secondary and tertiary recovery of oil and gas, hydro fracturing techniques, processing and cleaning of raw product, storage on remote platforms (e.g., Arctic, off-shore), safety aspects of offshore platforms.
c. Oil sands and heavy crude oils surface and sub-surface production and separation of the bitumen, tailings management
Include surface and in-situ production (e.g., SAGD), tailings management.
d. Refining, processing and upgrading of fossil fuels
Include processing of natural gas to pipeline specifications, and refining of conventional crude oils to refined petroleum products (RPPs), and the upgrading of bitumen and heavy oils either to synthetic crude oil or to RPPs. Upgrading may be done at an oil sands plant, regional merchant upgraders or integrated into a refinery producing RPPs.
e. Coal production, separation and processing
Include coal, lignite and peat exploration, deposit evaluation techniques, mining techniques, separation techniques, coking and blending, other processing such as coal to liquids, underground (in-situ) gasification.
f. Transportation of fossil fuels
Include transport of gaseous, liquid and solid hydrocarbons via pipelines (land and submarine) and their network evaluation, safety aspects of LNG transport and storage.

Renewable energy resources

Solar photovoltaics (PV), solar thermal-power and high-temperature applications, solar heating and cooling, wind energy, bio-energy – biomass production, bio-energy – biomass conversion to fuels, bio-energy – biomass conversion to heat and electricity, other bio-energy, small hydro (less than 10 MW), large hydro (greater than or equal to 10 MW), other renewable energy.

a. Solar photovoltaics (PV)
Include solar cell development, PV-module development, PV-inverter development, building-integrated PV-modules, PV-system development, other.
b. Solar thermal-power and high-temperature applications
Include solar chemistry, concentrating collector development, solar thermal power plants, high-temperature applications for heat and power.
c. Solar heating and cooling
Include daylighting, passive and active solar heating and cooling, collector development, hot water preparation, combined-space heating, solar architecture, solar drying, solar-assisted ventilation, swimming pool heating, low-temperature process heating, other.
d. Wind energy
Include technology development, such as blades, turbines, converters structures, system integration, other.
e. Bio-energy – Biomass production and transport
Include improvement of energy crops, research on bio-energy production potential and associated land-use effects, supply and transport of bio-solids, bio-liquids, biogas and bio-derived energy products (e.g., ethanol, biodiesel), compacting and baling, other.
f. Bio-energy – Biomass conversion to transportation fuel
Include conventional bio-fuels, cellulosic-derived alcohols, biomass gas-to-liquids, other energy-related products and by-products.
g. Bio-energy – Biomass conversion to heat and electricity
Include bio-based heat, electricity and combined heat and power (CHP), exclude multi-firing with fossil fuels.
h. Other bio-energy
Include recycling and the use of municipal, industrial and agricultural waste as energy not covered elsewhere.
i. Small hydro – (less than 10 MW)
Include plants with capacity below 10 MW.
j. Large hydro – (greater than or equal to 10 MW)
Include plants with capacity of 10 MW and above.
k. Other renewable energy
Include hot dry rock, hydro-thermal, geothermal heat applications (including agriculture), tidal power, wave energy, ocean current power, ocean thermal power, other.

Nuclear fission and fusion

Materials exploration, mining and preparation, tailings management, nuclear reactors, other fission, fusion.

a. Nuclear materials exploration, mining and preparation, tailings management
Include development of advanced exploration methods (geophysical, geochemical) for prospecting, ore surface and in-situ production, uranium and thorium extraction and conversion, enrichment, handling of tailings and remediation.
b. Nuclear reactors
Include nuclear reactors of all types and related system components.
c. Other fission
Include nuclear safety, environmental protection (emission reduction or avoidance), radiation protection and decommissioning of power plants and related nuclear fuel cycle installations, nuclear waste treatment, disposal and storage, fissile material recycling, fissile materials control, transport of radioactive materials.
d. Fusion
Include all types (e.g., magnetic confinement, laser applications).

Electric Power

Generation in utility sector, combined heat and power in industry and in buildings, electricity transmission, distribution and storage of electricity.

a. Electric power generation in utility sector
Include conventional and non-conventional technology (e.g., pulverised coal, fluidised bed, gasification-combined cycle, supercritical), re-powering, retrofitting, life extensions and upgrading of power plants, generators and components, super-conductivity, magneto hydrodynamic, dry cooling towers, co-firing (e.g., with biomass), air and thermal pollution reduction or avoidance, flue gas cleanup (excluding CO2 removal), CHP (combined heat and power) not covered elsewhere.
b. Electric power - combined heat and power in industry, buildings
Include industrial applications, small scale applications for buildings.
c. Electricity transmission, distribution and storage
Include solid state power electronics, load management and control systems, network problems, super-conducting cables, AC and DC high voltage cables, HVDC transmission, other transmission and distribution related to integrating distributed and intermittent generating sources into networks, all storage (e.g., batteries, hydro reservoirs, fly wheels), other.

Hydrogen and fuel cells

Hydrogen production for process applications, hydrogen production for transportation applications, hydrogen transport and storage, other hydrogen, fuel cells, both stationary and mobile.

a. Hydrogen production for process applications
b. Hydrogen production for transportation applications
c. Hydrogen transport and storage
d. Other hydrogen
Include end uses (e.g., combustion), other infrastructure and systems R&D (refuelling stations).
e. Stationary fuel cells
Include electricity generation, other stationary end-use.
f. Mobile fuel cells
Include portable applications.

Energy efficiency

Industry, residential and commercial, transportation, other energy efficiency.

a. Energy efficiency applications for industry
Include reduction of energy consumption through improved use of energy and/or reduction or avoidance of air and other emissions related to the use of energy in industrial systems and processes (excluding bio-energy-related) through the development of new techniques, new processes and new equipment, other.
b. Energy efficiency for residential, institutional and commercial sectors
Include space heating and cooling, ventilation and lighting control systems other than solar technologies, low energy housing design and performance other than solar technologies, new insulation and building materials, thermal performance of buildings, domestic appliances, other.
c. Energy efficiency for transportation
Includes analysis and optimisation of energy consumption in the transport sector, efficiency improvements in light-duty vehicles, heavy-duty vehicles, non-road vehicles, public transport systems, engine-fuel optimisation, use of alternative fuels (liquid and gaseous, other than hydrogen), fuel additives, diesel engines, Stirling motors, electric cars, hybrid cars, air emission reduction, other.
d. Other energy efficiency
Include waste heat utilisation (heat maps, process integration, total energy systems, low temperature thermodynamic cycles), district heating, heat pump development, reduction of energy consumption in the agricultural sector.

Other energy-related technologies

Carbon capture, transportation and storage for fossil fuel production and processing, electric power generation, industry in end-use sector, energy systems analysis, all other energy-related technologies.

a. Carbon capture, transport and storage related to fossil fuel production and processing
b. Carbon capture, transport and storage related to electric power production
c. Carbon capture, transport and storage related to industry in end-use sector
Include industry in the end-use sector, such as steel production, manufacturing, etc. (exclude fossil fuel production and processing and electric power production).
d. Energy system analysis
Include system analysis related to energy R&D not covered elsewhere, sociological, economical and environmental impact of energy which are not specifically related to one technology area listed in the sections above.
e. All other energy technologies
Include energy technology information dissemination, studies not related to a specific technology area listed above.

Producer price indexes portal: Frequently asked questions

What is a Producer Price Index?

Producer prices are the prices at which businesses sell their products or services to others (for example, the government, consumers or other businesses).

Producer Price Indexes (PPI) track the average change in prices Canadian producers receive or pay for goods, housing and services over time.

There are many producer price indexes, covering a wide range of economic activities, such as manufacturing, construction, professional services, distributive trades and financial services.

Statistics Canada publishes producer price data that can be used for many things including:

  • Financial planning, contract escalation and budgeting
  • Identifying sources of inflation in the economy and monitor economic trend
  • Calculating the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – a measure of growth of the economy over time

How are Producer Price Indexes used?

There are two main uses for producer price indexes. One is to adjust business or government contracts to inflation. The other is to calculate the real value of economic output by adjusting for price changes. In other words, price indexes are used to measure real gross domestic product (GDP). This is why there are many producer price indexes, covering a wide range of economic activities, such as manufacturing, construction, professional services, distributive trades and financial services.

Why are Producer Price Indexes important?

Producer Price Indexes help identify sources of inflation in the economy and monitor economic trends, distinguish between pure price change and change due to a difference in quality or volume and help businesses with financial planning, contracting and budgeting.

How are Producer Price Indexes data collected?

Businesses in different sectors of the economy and various stages of the supply chain are selected for price surveys. The surveys collect prices for a selection of goods or services on a monthly, quarterly or annual basis.

Some prices are also collected from other sources, such as administrative files, websites and other Statistics Canada survey programs.

How are Producer Price Indexes calculated?

Indexes have many layers and components.

To build an index, we need to identify a basket of goods and services that businesses in Canada might sell. We do this because it's impossible to capture the prices of every good and service a business produces. Instead, we track the selling prices of their most representative goods and services over time. To measure pure price change, it is important to keep the contents of the basket fixed over time. The basket differs depending on which part of the value chain is being measured. For example, the For-hire Motor Carrier Freight Services Price Index's basket contains the type of shipment and route travelled, whereas the basket for a residential building construction price index contains components such as building materials, labour and overhead.

Each item in the basket receives a relative importance, or basket weight, that represents its share in the total value of all goods or services in that particular sector of the economy. For example, motorized and recreational vehicles represent a larger share of the total value than meat, fish and dairy products; therefore, motorized and recreational vehicles receive a larger weight than meat, fish and dairy products in the Industrial Product Price Index basket.

Basket contents and their weights represent the production patterns of Canadian businesses, which change over time. For example, years ago manufacturers produced cars with cassette players. Today, they produce cars with Bluetooth or even electric cars. Updating the basket regularly ensures that the index remains representative of the range of goods and services produced in Canada.

How do Producer Price Indexes differ from the Consumer Price Index?

Producer Price Indexes (PPI) track the average change in prices Canadian producers receive or pay for goods, housing and services over time. The Consumer Price Index (CPI) tracks changes in prices as experienced by Canadian consumers by comparing, through time, the cost of a fixed basket of goods and services.

Why are Producer Price surveys mandatory?

Canadians need accurate and reliable information-the cornerstone for democratic decision making. Through the Statistics Act, Parliament has mandated Statistics Canada, as the national statistical agency, to produce such information.

Business surveys collect important economic information that is used by businesses, unions, non-profit organizations and all levels of government to make informed decisions in many areas.

Because most business surveys feed directly or indirectly into legally mandated programs, mandatory participation is required to ensure an adequate response rate as well as reliable results.

Where can I get more information on Producer Price Indexes?

For the latest releases of the Producer Price Indexes please visit The Daily.

The video "Producer Price Indexes" is available on the Statistics Canada Training Institute webpage. It provides an introduction to Statistics Canada's Producer Price Indexes-what they are, how they are made and what they are used for.

The research paper "A Historical Timeline of Canadian Producer Price Statistics," part of the Prices Analytical Series (Catalogue number 62F0014M), was created to showcase the key milestones in the history of Canadian producer price statistics. This historical timeline contains answers to questions such as: Who collected Canada's first statistics? What do Canadian producer price indexes measure?

The infographic "Producer Price Indexes at a Glance," part of the series Statistics Canada - Infographics (Catalogue number 11-627-M), demonstrates how producer price indexes for goods and services are calculated and why they are important for the Canadian economy.

Courts statistics

Courts Statistics

Follow:

Sign up to My StatCan to get updates in real-time.

Bringing together data, tools and reports to provide you with the latest information on courts in Canada.

Integrated Criminal Court Survey: Interactive Dashboard on Annual Key Indicators

The Integrated Criminal Court Survey: Interactive Dashboard on Annual Key Indicators provides an overview of the annual data on criminal courts program in Canada. The dashboard features statistics on the complexity, the processing time and the outcome of cases in youth courts and adult criminal courts.

Integrated Criminal Court Survey: Interactive Dashboard on Preliminary Quarterly Data

The Integrated Criminal Court Survey: Interactive Dashboard on Preliminary Quarterly Data provides an overview of the preliminary quarterly data on criminal courts program in Canada. The dashboard features statistics on the complexity, the processing time and the outcome of cases in youth courts and adult criminal courts.