Service standards at Statistics Canada
We publish service standards on a quarterly and annual basis to demonstrate our commitment to openness and transparency.
We publish service standards on a quarterly and annual basis to demonstrate our commitment to openness and transparency.
| Geography | Month |
|---|---|
| 202401 | |
| % | |
| Canada | 0.7 |
| Newfoundland and Labrador | 1.8 |
| Prince Edward Island | 1.1 |
| Nova Scotia | 1.6 |
| New Brunswick | 2.1 |
| Quebec | 1.4 |
| Ontario | 1.3 |
| Manitoba | 1.9 |
| Saskatchewan | 3.0 |
| Alberta | 2.0 |
| British Columbia | 1.7 |
| Yukon Territory | 3.1 |
| Northwest Territories | 1.2 |
| Nunavut | 1.6 |
| Geography | Month | ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 202301 | 202302 | 202303 | 202304 | 202305 | 202306 | 202307 | 202308 | 202309 | 202310 | 202311 | 202312 | 202401 | |
| percentage | |||||||||||||
| Canada | 0.7 | 0.8 | 0.6 | 0.4 | 0.6 | 0.4 | 0.3 | 0.3 | 0.3 | 0.4 | 0.4 | 0.4 | 0.5 |
| Newfoundland and Labrador | 0.6 | 0.4 | 0.3 | 1.2 | 0.6 | 0.3 | 0.3 | 0.3 | 0.1 | 0.2 | 0.2 | 0.3 | 0.3 |
| Prince Edward Island | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| Nova Scotia | 4.5 | 2.0 | 3.4 | 2.2 | 4.4 | 2.3 | 2.0 | 1.6 | 1.3 | 1.0 | 1.3 | 5.7 | 2.7 |
| New Brunswick | 1.9 | 2.0 | 1.5 | 1.7 | 1.1 | 0.6 | 0.9 | 0.7 | 0.8 | 0.8 | 0.9 | 0.9 | 1.0 |
| Quebec | 1.6 | 1.4 | 1.3 | 2.0 | 1.4 | 1.7 | 1.2 | 1.2 | 1.2 | 1.3 | 1.7 | 1.3 | 1.4 |
| Ontario | 1.3 | 1.4 | 1.4 | 1.0 | 1.4 | 0.8 | 0.7 | 0.7 | 0.7 | 0.8 | 0.6 | 0.7 | 1.1 |
| Manitoba | 0.7 | 0.5 | 0.4 | 1.1 | 0.9 | 0.6 | 0.6 | 0.7 | 0.6 | 1.3 | 0.7 | 0.6 | 0.6 |
| Saskatchewan | 0.5 | 0.5 | 0.7 | 0.6 | 0.7 | 0.5 | 0.6 | 1.4 | 0.9 | 0.8 | 0.6 | 1.0 | 1.1 |
| Alberta | 1.4 | 0.9 | 0.4 | 0.3 | 0.5 | 0.3 | 0.2 | 0.3 | 0.4 | 0.5 | 0.3 | 0.5 | 0.5 |
| British Columbia | 1.5 | 1.8 | 1.8 | 1.3 | 1.0 | 1.2 | 0.9 | 1.1 | 1.0 | 0.9 | 0.9 | 0.8 | 1.0 |
| Yukon Territory | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| Northwest Territories | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| Nunavut | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
Date: January 2024
Program manager: Director, Canadian Centre for Justice and Community Safety Statistics
Director General, Health, Justice, Diversity, and Population
In accordance with the Privacy Act, Statistics Canada is submitting a new institutional personal information bank (PIB) to describe any personal information obtained from Intensive Rehabilitative Custody Supervision (IRCS) programs, for the purposes of the Statistics Act. The following PIB is proposed for review and registration.
Intensive Rehabilitative Custody Supervision (IRCS)
Description: This bank describes information that is obtained from provincial/territorial correctional services programs in Canada on youth who participate in Intensive Rehabilitative Custody and Supervision (IRCS) programs. Personal information may include name, date of birth, sex, Municipality/Postal code, Social Insurance Number, Driving License Number, Fingerprint section ID number/CPIC and IRCS program number.
Class of Individuals: Youth under provincial/territorial IRCS programs in: New Brunswick, Ontario, Manitoba, Nova Scotia, Saskatchewan, Alberta, and British Columbia.
Purpose: The personal information is used to produce statistical data and analyses at a disaggregated level on the provincial/territorial youth populations participating in IRCS programs to understand the impact of the IRCS programs and develop programming to reduce recidivism and support the rehabilitation and reintegration of at-risk youth. Personal information is collected pursuant to the Statistics Act (Sections 3, 7, 13, 22 (d)).
Consistent Uses: The information may be used in record linkage projects with other justice datasets carried out by Statistics Canada's Canadian Centre for Justice and Community Safety Statistics (CCJCSS), as well as with other data holdings. Linkage projects may be developed between CCJCSS and other Statistics Canada databases to post release outcomes of IRCS clients, including the Census of Population, Vital Statistics databases, the Discharge Abstract Database and the TI Family File.
Retention and Disposal Standards: Information is retained until it is no longer required for statistical purposes and then it is destroyed.
RDA Number: 2018/007
Related Record Number: StatCan CCJ 135
TBS Registration: To be assigned by TBS
Bank Number: StatCan PPU 022
Under the authority of the Statistics ActFootnote1, Statistics Canada will acquire information from provincial/territorial correctional services programs in Canada on youth who participate in Intensive Rehabilitative Custody and Supervision (IRCS) programs, and will perform record linkages using Statistics Canada's Social Data Linkage Environment (SDLE)Footnote2 in order to identify criminal justice system recontacts and perform outcome studies for the IRCS population.
The federal Intensive Rehabilitative Custody and Supervision (IRCS) Program is a contribution program with all provinces and territories for the delivery of specialized therapeutic programs and services for youth with mental health needs who are convicted of a serious violent offence. The IRCS program is funded by the Department of Justice Canada and has been available since 2003. Only youth justice service programs operated by provincial and territorial governments receive funding. The main objectives of IRCS programs are to reduce recidivism and support the rehabilitation and reintegration of these high-risk youth back into society.
Justice Canada does not have the legislative authority to collect identifying data of IRCS participants due to the privacy requirements set out in the Youth Criminal Justice Act (YCJA), Part 6Footnote3, and are therefore unable to collect participant names and other identifiers that are required to perform record linkages and conduct analyses. The information collected by Statistics Canada from the provincial IRCSs will not be shared with Justice Canada in any way. Only non-confidential outputs will be made available.
The information collected from the provincial/territorial correctional services programs will include IRCS program number, Person Identification Number for the correctional program, sex, date of birth, first name, middle name, last name, municipality or postal code, Social Insurance Number (SIN), Driving License Number and Fingerprint section ID number which is contained in the Canadian Police Identification Centre (CPIC), where applicable for IRCS participants. This information will allow linkage opportunities using Statistics Canada's Social Data Linkage Environment (SDLE) to identify criminal justice system recontacts and perform outcome studies for the IRCS population. For example, recidivism and re-offending patterns including types of offences, frequency, and time to re-offend following the completion of youth sentences and intensive programming may be examined. With record linkage and integration with other social and justice data, statistics on socio-demographics and other information, such as mental health history and family history, can be produced for the IRCS population.
Understanding the impact of the IRCS programs is crucial for developing and altering programs to reduce recidivism and support youth rehabilitation. Analyzing program results and participant socio-demographic characteristics can evaluate program effectiveness, enabling the development of specialized therapeutic services to address mental health needs and improve recidivism rates and re-integration of high-risk youth back into society. Statistics Canada is working with federal partners, including the Department of Justice Canada and Public Safety Canada, to develop and publish articles on reconviction of offenders post correctional involvement and indicators of desistance from crime, and the analysis of recidivism and desistence of IRCS program participants fits in well with this initiative.
For studies using IRCS data,only the aggregate statistics and analyses will be released outside of Statistics Canada. Given the small number of IRCS participantsFootnote4, Statistics Canada's methodologists will review outputs to ensure there is no possibility of identifying or re-identifying individuals. In addition, all analysis will be completed at a national level, there will be no jurisdictional-level analysis which will also protect the privacy of participants.
For this project, Statistics Canada will collect a special extraction of IRCS program data from seven participating provincial correctional services programs, namely New Brunswick, Ontario, Manitoba, Nova Scotia, Saskatchewan, Alberta, and British Columbia. Information on all youth participants since inception of each provincial IRCS program will be requested. In addition, the information currently held by Justice Canada such as diagnosis of mental health conditions, disaggregated data on Indigenous identity and racialized group on IRCS participants will also be collected.
The only variables that will be linked within Statistics Canada's secure SDLE are those required to identify recontacts with the justice system, along with desistence indicators measuring re-integration post justice system involvement, such as educational attainment, employment history and adverse health outcomes (e.g., overdoses or premature death). Data holdings that could potentially be linked to IRCS include Census, Family, or Tax files. A comparative analysis may be done using a subset of non-IRCS participants in youth corrections drawn from the Canadian Correctional Services Survey (CCSS)Footnote5. Statistics Canada will perform all analysis and produce a report on the results. For record linkage purposes, at no point during or after the record linkage process are personal identifiers brought together with analytical data in one dataset. Access to the personal information data will be limited to only a small number of Statistics Canada employees with a need-to-know.
This is expected to be a one-time extraction from the participating provincial correctional services programs to collect historical data on IRCS participants. For future analysis, Statistics Canada anticipates integrating the collection of IRCS program participant identification numbers into the Canadian Correctional Services Survey. Thus, moving forward, the need for this special extraction will no longer be required for any future studies as the information would be integrated into the ongoing survey program at the Canadian Centre for Justice and Community Safety Statistics.
Justice partners and stakeholders such as the Department of Justice Canada, Public Safety Canada and provincial/territorial correctional services programs, as well as the Canadian public will benefit from the results compiled as the information contributes to the creation of evidence-based policy and program development, and thereby contributes to the public interest. These data will help fill the need to inform evidence-driven approaches to crime prevention and programs aimed at reducing recidivism, as well as programs designed for rehabilitation, community integration, and public safety. Only non-confidential aggregate statistics and analyses conforming to the confidentiality provisions of the Statistics Act will be released outside of Statistics Canada.
While the Generic Privacy Impact Assessment (PIA) addresses most of the privacy and security risks related to statistical activities conducted by Statistics Canada, this supplement was developed due to the overall sensitivity of the personal information being requested with relation to the affected individuals who represent a small population of at-risk youth. As is the case with all PIAs, Statistics Canada's privacy framework ensures that elements of privacy protection and privacy controls are documented and applied.
The use of personal information for the IRCS project can be justified against Statistics Canada's Necessity and Proportionality Framework:
Statistics Canada requires the information to produce accurate information on the correctional population in Canada and specifically to produce valuable demographic information at a disaggregated level on the federal, provincial, and territorial populations supervised under correctional services, including the youth population. The IRCS program is an important component of correction supervision of youth in Canada, as it has been developed for high-risk youth with mental health concerns who have committed serious criminal offences. The program was initiated in 2003 with the enactment of the Youth Criminal Justice Act and the program continues to operate 20 years later. Understanding the outcomes of IRCS participants post youth correctional supervision, and where appropriate contrasting with outcomes for non-participants, has been a critical data gap for a number of years. For example, to fully understand the benefits and limitations of the IRCS program, policy analysts and researchers need to know the rate of IRCS participants that return to the justice system after participating in the program, as well as the demand for health services and employment/un-employment rates of the population, amongst other indicators. Working with participating youth corrections programs and Justice Canada, Statistics Canada aims to address this gap in its statistical program on youth corrections by collecting additional information from youth correctional service programs. This new data collection will allow the agency to address this research priority for criminal justice policy makers and the public.
The personal information on the IRCS participants for this project will allow the record linkage needed to identify recontact with the criminal justice system, as well as determine outcomes of the youth involved in IRCS programs at a disaggregated level. This information is critical to understanding the impact of the IRCS programs and developing programming to reduce recidivism and support the rehabilitation and reintegration process of this vulnerable youth population. Analysis of the results of the IRCS program will support rehabilitation and reintegration. With information on the outcomes of these youth, specialized therapeutic programs and services can continue to be developed to address mental health needs, reduce the level of violence, improve recidivism rates and the rehabilitation of youth who are convicted of a serious violent offence. These data will help fill the need to inform evidence-driven approaches to crime prevention and programs aimed at reducing recidivism, as well as programs designed for rehabilitation, community integration, and public safety. This research has the potential to lead to positive changes in the lives of individual youth who experience these programs, as well as benefitting society at a broader level.
Statistics Canada's Canadian Centre for Justice and Community Safety Statistics currently conducts two surveys that collect personal identifiers of youth: the Integrated Criminal Courts Survey (ICCS) and the Canadian Correctional Services Survey (CCSS). The scope of the CCSS includes IRCS programs, however, IRCS participants are not currently identifiable in the dataset because the IRCS program number is not provided to the CCSS. Thus, Statistics Canada has validated the effectiveness of collecting this information directly from institutions to generate statistics on the youth correctional services population.
Given the small size of the IRCS population, the current project is considered a one-time data collection project to acquire the IRCS information from the participating provincial correctional services programs. For future analysis, Statistics Canada anticipates updating the Canadian Correctional Services Survey to include the IRCS program number assigned to participants. Thus, moving forward, the need for this special extraction will no longer be required for any future studies as the information would be integrated into the ongoing survey program at the Canadian Centre for Justice and Community Safety Statistics.
As the annual production of the CCSS includes linkage to the Social Data Linkage Environment (SDLE), this project would not need to be replicated in the future, as all necessary identifying information on IRCS participants required for data linkage would be obtained from the CCSS.
New insights derived from the analysis of the IRCS population will improve measures to identify re-contact with the criminal justice system and other indicators of re-integration, to meet the needs of justice stakeholders.
The direct identifiers collected for the IRCS population, such as name and date of birth, are critical to the proposed record linkage studies. These direct identifiers will be sent to the linkage team to establish linkages with other Statistics Canada datasets.
Only the variables required to achieve the statistical goals of the linkage will be requested in order to mitigate potential impacts to the privacy of the affected individuals under correctional supervision. All data collected for the IRCS project are considered the minimum data required to address the data needs identified specifically by Justice Canada to evaluate IRCS programs, as well as broader needs identified by the Department of Justice and Public Safety and other partners and stakeholders such as law enforcement officials and provincial/territorial correctional services programs, to inform recontact analysis.
The public benefits of the research findings are expected to inform policies and lead to positive changes within correctional services and programs in Canada.
The IRCS data will help fill the need to inform evidence-driven approaches to crime prevention and programs aimed at reducing recidivism, as well as programs designed for rehabilitation, community integration, and public safety. These measures and analyses, as well as the capacity for data disaggregation, are only possible with the use of the personal information collected on the IRCS participants. The potential benefits and positive changes to social and justice-related programs and services for at-risk youth are believed to be proportional to the overall risks to privacy.
Administrative data from the provincial and territorial correctional services IRCS programs in Canada represent the only practical and accurate source of information to collect and meet the requirements of this project. New survey collection from individuals of this information would be extremely burdensome and likely of much lower quality than what currently exists in the correctional services management systems designed to accurately capture information on individuals under correctional supervision.
Justice Canada has collected operational data on youth participating in IRCS programs, however, outcome information and the personal identifiers that would allow IRCS data to be integrated and linked with other data sources (for example, police, courts and corrections data) are not collected. Administrative data collection and subsequent microdata linkage is the only method to identify criminal justice system recontacts and other outcomes of individuals, in terms of understanding social, economic, health, and demographic trends related to the IRCS population.
The overall risk of harm to the survey respondents has been deemed manageable with existing Statistics Canada safeguards that are described in Statistics Canada's Generic Privacy Impact Assessment, with particular emphasis on the following measures:
This assessment concludes that, with the existing Statistics Canada safeguards, any remaining risks are such that Statistics Canada is prepared to accept and manage the risk.
This Supplementary Privacy Impact Assessment has been reviewed and recommended for approval by Statistics Canada's Chief Privacy Officer, Director General for Modern Statistical Methods and Data Science, and Assistant Chief Statistician for Social, Health and Labour Statistics.
The Chief Statistician of Canada has the authority for section 10 of the Privacy Act for Statistics Canada, and is responsible for the Agency’s operations, including the program area mentioned in this Supplementary Privacy Impact Assessment.
This Privacy Impact Assessment has been approved by the Chief Statistician of Canada.
Complete online: www.census.gc.ca
Ce questionnaire est disponible en français (1-833-739-2024)
Secure access code
Thank you for taking the time to participate in the 2024 Census Test. The information you provide is converted into statistics used by communities, businesses, and governments to plan services and make informed decisions about employment, schools, public transportation and hospitals.
Preparations for the 2026 Census have begun, and Statistics Canada is seeking your participation in this important test.
Your answers are collected under the authority of the Statistics Act and kept strictly confidential. By law, your household must complete a 2024 Census Test questionnaire.
Statistics Canada makes use of existing sources of information such as immigration, income tax and benefits data to ensure the least amount of burden is placed on households.
The information that you provide may be used by Statistics Canada for other statistical and research purposes or may be combined with other survey or administrative data sources.
Make sure you count yourself into Canada's statistical portrait, and complete your census questionnaire today.
Thank you,
Anil Arora
Chief Statistician of Canada
This information is collected under the authority of the Statistics Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. S-19.
1. What is your telephone number?
2. What is the address of this dwelling?
3. What is the mailing address of this dwelling, if different from above?
(e.g., Rural Route, PO Box, General Delivery)
1. Including yourself, how many persons usually live at this address on May 14, 2024?
Include: all persons who have their main residence at this address, even if they are temporarily away.
See the instructions on page 3 (joint custody, students, landed immigrants, secondary residence, etc.).
2. Including yourself, list all persons who usually live here on May 14, 2024.
Important: Begin the list with an adult followed, if applicable, by that person's spouse or common-law partner and by their children. Continue with all other persons who usually live at this address.
Did you leave anyone out of Step B because you were not sure the person should be listed?
For example, a student, a child in joint custody, a person temporarily away, a person who lives here temporarily, a resident from another country with a work or study permit, a refugee claimant, etc.
Copy the names in Step B to question 1, at the top of page 4.
Keep the same order.
If more than five persons live here, you will need an extra questionnaire; call 1-833-739-2024.
If this address is:
Mail this questionnaire in the enclosed envelope today.
1. Name
In the spaces provided, copy the names in the same order as in Step B. Then answer the following questions for each person.
Person 1
The following questions refer to each person's situation on May 14, 2024, unless otherwise specified.
2. What was this person's sex at birth?
Sex refers to sex assigned at birth.
3. What is this person's gender?
Refers to current gender which may be different from sex assigned at birth and may be different from what is indicated on legal documents.
4. What are this person's date of birth and age?
If exact date of birth is not known, enter best estimate. For children less than 1 year old, enter 0 for age.
5. What is this person's marital status?
Mark "x" one circle only.
6. Is this person living with a common-law partner?
Common-law refers to two people who live together as a couple but who are not married, regardless of the duration of the relationship.
7. What is the relationship of this person to Person 1?
If none of the responses in the list describes this person's relationship to Person 1, then specify a response under "Other relationship".
Person 1
Person 2
Persons 3-5
8. Can this person speak English or French well enough to conduct a conversation?
Mark "x" one circle only.
9. a) What language(s) does this person speak on a regular basis at home?
If this person indicates only one language in question 9. a), go to question 10.
9. b) Of these languages, which one does this person speak most often at home?
Indicate more than one language only if they are spoken equally at home.
10. What is the language that this person first learned at home in childhood and still understands?
If this person no longer understands the first language learned, indicate the second language learned.
11. Has this person ever served in the Canadian military?
Canadian military service includes service with the Regular Force or Primary Reserve Force as an Officer or Non-Commissioned Member. It does not include service with the Cadets (COATS), the Supplementary Reserve or the Canadian Rangers.
Mark "x" one circle only.
The following questions collect information in accordance with the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms to support education programs in English and French in Canada.
12. Is this dwelling located in Quebec?
13. Did this person do any of their primary or secondary schooling in French in Canada (including immersion)?
Mark "x" one circle only.
14. In which type of program was this schooling in French done?
15. For how many years did this person attend a regular French program in a French-language school?
16. Did this person do any of their primary or secondary schooling in an English-language school in Canada (including immersion)?
Mark "x" one circle only.
17. For how many years did this person do their schooling in an English-language school in Canada (including immersion)?
The following question is about difficulties a person may have doing certain activities. Only difficulties or long-term conditions that have lasted or are expected to last for six months or more should be considered.
18. a) Does this person have any difficulty seeing (even when wearing glasses or contact lenses)?
18. b) Does this person have any difficulty hearing (even when using a hearing aid)?
18. c) Does this person have any difficulty walking, using stairs, using their hands or fingers or doing other physical activities?
18. d) Does this person have any difficulty learning, remembering or concentrating?
18. e) Does this person have any emotional, psychological or mental health conditions (e.g., anxiety, depression, bipolar disorder, substance abuse, anorexia, etc.)?
18. f) Does this person have any other health problem or long-term condition that has lasted or is expected to last for six months or more?
Exclude: any health problems previously reported in questions 18. a) to 18. e) above.
19. Where was this person born?
Specify one response only, according to present boundaries.
20. Where were this person's parents born?
Specify the country or countries according to present boundaries.
21. a) Is this person a Canadian citizen?
"Canadian citizen by naturalization" refers to an immigrant who was granted citizenship of Canada under the Citizenship Act.
21. b) Is this person a citizen of a country other than Canada?
Indicate more than one country of citizenship, if applicable.
22. What language(s), other than English or French, can this person speak well enough to conduct a conversation?
23. What were the ethnic or cultural origins of this person's ancestors?
Ancestors may have Indigenous origins, or origins that refer to different countries, or other origins that may not refer to different countries.
For examples of ethnic or cultural origins, visit www12.statcan.gc.ca/ancestry
24. Is this person First Nations, Métis or Inuk (Inuit)?
Note: First Nations (North American Indian) includes Status and Non-Status Indians.
If "Yes", mark "x" the circle(s) that best describe(s) this person now.
This question collects information in accordance with the Employment Equity Act and its Regulations and Guidelines to support programs that promote equal opportunity for everyone to share in the social, cultural, and economic life of Canada.
25. Is this person:
Mark "x" more than one circle or specify, if applicable.
26. Is this person a Status Indian (Registered or Treaty Indian as defined by the Indian Act of Canada)?
27. Is this person a member of a First Nation or Indian band?
If "Yes", which First Nation or Indian band?
For example, Soowahlie Indian Band, Sturgeon Lake First Nation, Atikamekw of Manawan.
28. Is this person a registered member of a Métis organization or Settlement?
If "Yes", which Métis organization or Settlement?
Note: Mark "x" one of the listed signatories of the Canada-Métis Nation Accord or specify a Métis organization or Metis Settlement (for example, Kikino Metis Settlement).
29. Is this person enrolled under, or a beneficiary of, an Inuit land claims agreement?
30. What is this person's religion?
Indicate a specific denomination or religion even if this person is not currently a practising member of that group.
For example, Roman Catholic, Muslim, United Church, Anglican, Hindu, Sikh, Baptist, Pentecostal, Buddhist, Jewish, Lutheran, Presbyterian, Greek Orthodox, etc.
For additional examples of denominations and religions, visit www12.statcan.gc.ca/religion-e
31. Where did this person live 1 year ago, that is, on May 14, 2023?
Mark "x" one circle only.
Note:
For those who mark the fourth circle: Please give the name of the city or town rather than the metropolitan area of which it is a part.
For example:
32. Where did this person live 5 years ago, that is, on May 14, 2019?
Mark "x" one circle only.
Note:
For those who mark the fourth circle: Please give the name of the city or town rather than the metropolitan area of which it is a part.
For example:
Continue only for each person aged 15 years and over (born before May 14, 2009).
33. Has this person completed a high school (secondary school) diploma or equivalent?
Include qualifications obtained in Canada or outside Canada.
Examples of high school equivalency certificates are General Educational Development (GED) and Adult Basic Education (ABE).
High school diploma or certificate
34. a) Has this person completed a Registered Apprenticeship or other trades certificate or diploma?
Include qualifications obtained in Canada or outside Canada.
Mark all that apply.
For example, hairstyling, cooking, electrician, carpentry.
Registered Apprenticeship or trades certificate or diploma
34. b) Has this person completed a college, CEGEP or other non-university certificate or diploma?
Include qualifications obtained in Canada or outside Canada.
Exclude any certificates or diplomas reported in question 34. a) above.
Mark all that apply.
For example, accounting technology, industrial engineering technology, legal assistant.
College, CEGEP or other non-university certificate or diploma
34. c) Has this person completed a university certificate, diploma or degree?
Include qualifications obtained in Canada or outside Canada.
Mark all that apply.
University certificate, diploma or degree
35. What was the major field of study of the highest certificate, diploma or degree that this person completed?
Please be specific.
For example, automobile mechanics, health care attendant, medical laboratory technology, civil engineering, agricultural economics.
Print in capital letters as follows: COMPUTER ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY
36. In what province, territory or country did this person complete their highest certificate, diploma or degree?
37. a) At any time since September 2023, was this person attending school, such as high school, college, CEGEP or university?
Report only attendance for courses that can be used as credits towards a certificate, diploma or degree. Distance learning for credit is included.
Attendance at any time since September 2023
37. b) What type of school was this person attending?
Mark all that apply.
At any time since September 2023
Note: Many of the following questions refer to the week from Sunday, May 5 to Saturday, May 11, 2024.
38. During the week of Sunday, May 5 to Saturday, May 11, 2024, how many hours did this person spend working for pay or in self-employment?
Please enter the total number of hours worked for pay or in self-employment at all jobs held during the week of May 5 to May 11.
Exclude number of hours:
Include number of hours:
39. During the week of May 5 to May 11, 2024, was this person on temporary lay-off or absent from their job or business?
Mark "x" one circle only.
40. During the week of May 5 to May 11, 2024, did this person have definite arrangements to start a new job within the next four weeks?
41. Did this person look for paid work during the four weeks from April 14 to May 11, 2024?
For example, did this person contact an employment centre, check with employers, place or answer Internet ads, etc.?
Mark "x" one circle only.
42. Could this person have started a job during the week of Sunday, May 5 to Saturday, May 11, 2024 had one been available?
Mark "x" one circle only.
43. When did this person last work for pay or in self-employment, even for a few days?
Mark "x" one circle only.
Note: Questions 44 to 50. b) refer to this person's job or business during the week of May 5 to May 11, 2024. If this person held no job, answer for the job of longest duration since January 1, 2023. If this person held more than one job, answer for the job at which they worked the most hours.
44. For whom did this person work?
For self-employed persons, enter the name of their business. If the business does not have a name, enter the person's name.
Print in capital letters as follows:
Name of firm, government department, etc.
ABC CONCRETE PRODUCTS LIMITED
45. What kind of business, industry or service was this?
Please be specific. For example:
46. What was this person's work or occupation?
Please be specific. For example:
47. In this work, what were this person's main activities?
Please be specific. For example:
48. In this job or business, was this person an employee, self-employed or an unpaid family worker?
Mark "x" one circle only.
49. Was this person's farm or business incorporated?
50. a) In this job, what language(s) did this person use on a regular basis?
If this person indicates only one language in question 50. a), go to question 51.
50. b) Of these languages, which one did this person use most often in this job?
Indicate more than one language only if they were used equally at work.
These questions are only for persons aged 15 years and over with a job or absent from their job or business during the week of Sunday, May 5 to Saturday, May 11, 2024.
51. At what address did this person usually work most of the time?
Example: 365 Laurier Ave. West
If the street address is unknown or if the address is a post office box, specify the building or nearest street intersection. Do not give a post office box number.
If the address of work is different than the address of the employer, please provide the address where this person actually works (e.g., school teachers should provide the address of their school, not the address of the school board).
If this person held more than one job, answer for the job at which they worked the most hours.
52. a) What modes of commuting did this person usually use to get to work?
Mark "x" as many circles as applicable.
Mark "Subway or elevated rail" for:
Mark "Light rail, streetcar or commuter train" for:
52. b) What main mode of commuting did this person usually use to get to work?
Mark "x" one circle only.
If this person used more than one mode of commuting to work, mark the one used for most of the travel distance.
52. c) How many workers, including this person, usually ride in this car, truck or van to work?
53. a) What time did this person's trip to work usually begin?
53. b) How many minutes did this person's trip to work usually last?
Remember, these questions are only for persons aged 15 years and over.
54. a) How many weeks did this person work in 2023, including paid vacation?
A year has 52 weeks.
Include:
Exclude:
54. b) What was the main reason this person did not work for the whole year in 2023, meaning from 49 to 52 weeks?
Mark "x" one circle only.
55. a) During most of these weeks, did this person work full time or part time?
Mark "x" one circle only.
55. b) What was the main reason this person worked mostly part time instead of full time in 2023?
Mark "x" one circle only.
56. In 2023, did this person pay for child care, such as day care or babysitting, so that this person could work at their paid job(s)?
When child care or day camps help several people work, enter the amount only once.
Answer "Yes" or "No". If "Yes", also enter the total amount for 2023.
57. In 2023, did this person pay child or spousal support payments to a former spouse or partner?
Support payments are covered by an agreement to pay a fixed amount on a regular basis. Exclude all other gifts or transfers of money. Include only support payments actually paid.
Answer "Yes" or "No". If "Yes", also enter the total amount for 2023.
58. Does this person pay, partly or entirely, the rent or mortgage, taxes, electricity, etc. for this dwelling?
Mark "Yes" if this person pays the rent or mortgage, taxes, electricity, etc. for this dwelling, even if more than one person contributes to such payments.
A dwelling is a separate set of living quarters with a private entrance from the outside or from a common hallway or stairway inside the building. This entrance should not be through someone else's living quarters.
Do not consider payments for other dwellings such as the school residence of a child, the residence of a former spouse, or another dwelling that you may own or rent.
Note: Turn the page and answer the questions about this dwelling.
Answer Questions E1. to E9. about this dwelling.
The questions refer to May 14, 2024, unless otherwise specified.
A dwelling is a separate set of living quarters with a private entrance from the outside or from a common hallway or stairway inside the building. This entrance should not be through someone else's living quarters.
E1. Is this dwelling:
Mark "x" one circle only.
E2. Is this dwelling part of a condominium development?
E3. a) How many rooms are there in this dwelling?
Count kitchen, bedrooms, finished rooms in attic or basement, etc.
Do not count bathrooms, halls, vestibules and rooms used solely for business purposes.
E3. b) How many of these rooms are bedrooms?
Count all rooms designed as bedrooms, even if they are now used for something else. Also count basement bedrooms.
E4. When was this dwelling originally built?
Mark the period in which the building was completed, not the time of any later remodelling, additions or conversions. If year is not known, give best estimate.
E5. Is this dwelling in need of any repairs?
Do not include desirable remodelling or additions.
E6. Is this dwelling located on an agricultural operation that is operated by a member of this household?
Answer questions E7. to E9. for this dwelling even if you own or rent more than one dwelling.
If the exact amount is not known, please give a best estimate.
E7. a) For this dwelling, what are the yearly payments (last 12 months) for electricity?
E7. b) For this dwelling, what are the yearly payments (last 12 months) for oil, gas, coal, wood or other fuels?
E7. c) For this dwelling, what are the yearly payments (last 12 months) for water and other municipal services?
For renters only, answer parts E8. a) and E8. b):
E8. a) What is the monthly rent paid for this dwelling?
E8. b) Is this dwelling subsidized?
Subsidized housing includes rent geared to income, social housing, public housing, government-assisted housing, non-profit housing, rent supplements and housing allowances.
For owners only, answer parts E9. a) through E9. e):
E9. a) What are the total regular monthly mortgage or loan payments for this dwelling?
E9. b) Are the property taxes (municipal and school) included in monthly mortgage or loan payments indicated in the previous question?
E9. c) What are the estimated yearly property taxes (municipal and school) for this dwelling?
E9. d) If you were to sell this dwelling now, for how much would you expect to sell it?
E9. e) What are the monthly condominium fees?
If more than five persons live here, you will need an extra questionnaire; call 1-833-739-2024.
You have now completed your questionnaire. Please mail it today. If you have lost the return envelope, please mail the questionnaire to:
Statistics Canada
PO BOX 99996 STN FED-GOVT
Ottawa, ON K1A 9Z6
Thank you for your cooperation.
Please use the space provided below if you have concerns, suggestions or comments to make about:
The confidentiality of your responses is protected by law. All Statistics Canada employees have taken an oath of secrecy. Your personal information cannot be given to anyone outside Statistics Canada without your consent. This is your right.
This guide provides you with an overview of the 2024 Census Test questionnaire. It explains how to complete the questionnaire, why your participation is important and why we ask the questions. Note that you can complete your questionnaire online at: www.census.gc.ca
Complete your 2024 Census Test questionnaire online at www.census.gc.ca or use the paper questionnaire today.
To complete the questionnaire online:
To complete the questionnaire on paper:
Visit www.census.gc.ca or call the Census Help Line at 1-833-835-2024 if:
For TTY (a telecommunications device for people who are deaf) service, call 1-833-830-3109.
Statistics Canada is conducting a census test to evaluate new and modified questions along with the collection procedures and tools in preparation for the 2026 Census of Population.
A sample of approximately 187,000 dwellings has been selected to participate in this census test. Since accuracy depends on complete information, each household selected to participate in this test must, by law, complete and return their questionnaire.
Leading up to the 2024 Census Test, Statistics Canada held content consultations on the census questionnaire. Responses were provided by various data users, including federal, provincial, territorial and local government departments; First Nations people, Métis and Inuit; the general public; academia; special interest groups; and the private sector.
Factors considered in developing census content include legislative requirements, program and policy needs, burden on respondents when answering questions, privacy concerns, input from consultation and testing, data quality, cost and operational considerations, historical comparability, and availability of alternative data sources.
Based on the content consultation results, the 2024 Census Test will assess whether proposed content changes are feasible and whether the content will provide relevant and high-quality data.
The information you provide will be kept confidential, in accordance with the Statistics Act. Your information may be used by Statistics Canada in support of our other surveys or for analysis. No one outside of Statistics Canada can have access to information that identifies individuals.
Information from the census will be used by governments, businesses, associations, community organizations and many others to make important decisions for your community, your province or territory, and the entire country. The information you provide will help ensure that the 2026 Census accurately reflects Canada's changing society.
Your participation is important. Please complete your questionnaire today.
Please note that multiple versions of the 2024 Census Test questionnaire are being tested and that not all dwellings will be asked all questions.
Step A – We need your telephone number to contact you in case there is information missing on your questionnaire. We need your address, as well as your mailing address, to ensure that all dwellings are counted.
Steps B and C – These steps help you decide who should be included and who should not be included on your questionnaire. They help us ensure that we have counted everyone we need to count and that no one is counted twice.
Step D – The spaces at question 1 at the top of page 4 allow you to copy the names from Step B.
Basic demographic information – These questions provide information about the demographic characteristics of people in Canada. This information is used by all levels of government to make important decisions, such as planning community services and social programs, including Old Age Security and the Canada Child Benefit. It is also used by municipalities to plan a variety of services, such as child care, schools, hospitals and emergency services.
Languages – These questions are used to provide a profile of the linguistic diversity of Canada's population. This information is used to estimate the need for services in English and French, and to better understand the current state and the evolution of Canada's various language groups, including official languages, Indigenous languages and other non-official languages. The questionnaire also collects information on languages used at work.
Language of instruction – These questions are used to collect information in accordance with the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms to support education programs in English and French in Canada.
Activities of daily living – This question provides information on the number of people in Canada who may have difficulties doing certain activities, including those who may have a long-term physical, mental or other health condition. This information is used to identify people who are likely to have a disability. Statistics Canada will then follow up with a more detailed survey.
General health – This question seeks information on the health status of people in Canada to help plan policies, programs and services for the health care system. General health is an indicator of overall health status. General health refers to the perception of a person's health in general, either by the person, or by the person in the household who is completing the census questionnaire.
Place of birth – These questions tell us about where people and their parents were born. They provide information on the diversity of Canada's population, and on the movement of people within Canada and from other countries to Canada. This information is also used to assess the social and economic conditions of second-generation Canadians, and helps us understand Canada's immigration history.
Citizenship – This question provides information on the citizenship status of Canada's population. This information is used to estimate the number of potential voters and to plan citizenship classes and programs. It also provides information about the population with multiple citizenships.
The information you provide throughout the questionnaire should reflect each person's situation on May 14, 2024, unless the questions specify otherwise. This reference date ensures that the information collected in the questionnaire provides an accurate snapshot of Canada's society at this point in time in our history.
Ethnic or cultural origins – This question provides information about ethnic and cultural diversity in Canada. This information is used by associations, agencies and researchers for activities such as health promotion, communications and social support programs.
Indigenous peoples – These questions provide information used by governments, including First Nations, Métis and Inuit governments and organizations, to develop programs and services for First Nations people, Métis and Inuit.
Canadian military experience – This question provides information on the number of people with Canadian military experience. Governments will use this information to develop programs and services to meet the changing needs of the Veteran population.
Population groups (Visible minorities) – This question helps collect data that are used by governments, businesses, community groups, health care providers, researchers and a variety of organizations throughout the country to support programs that provide equal opportunity for everyone to share in the social, cultural and economic life of Canada.
Religion – This question provides information about religious affiliation and diversity. This information is used to help understand changes in Canadian society, as well as to plan facilities and services within diverse communities.
Mobility – These questions tell us where residents of Canada are moving to and where they are moving from. This information is used to look at the characteristics of people who move and to identify needs for housing, education, health, transportation and social services.
Second address – The main objective of these questions is to collect statistical information on populations who live part of the year in another location than their main residence for reasons related to vacation, work, study, health or family. This information will be used by organizations that deliver services to these populations.
Homelessness – These questions provide information on people's experiences with homelessness and other housing challenges over the past 12 months. This information is used by organizations and governments to support communities in addressing homelessness.
Education – These questions provide information on the education, training and recent school attendance of residents of Canada. Governments use this information to develop training and other programs to meet the changing needs of the workforce and of specific groups, such as immigrants, First Nations people, Métis, Inuit, and youth.
Labour market activities – These questions provide information on Canada's workforce, including the industries and occupations in which people work. Employment information is used to assess the economic conditions of communities and specific populations, such as First Nations people, Métis, Inuit and immigrants. Industry and occupation information is used to forecast job opportunities.
Commuting to work – These questions tell us where people work and how they get to work. This information is used to assess commuting patterns, public transit needs and energy use. Commuting information also helps urban planners identify locations for new hospitals, schools, and daycare and recreational facilities, as well as the need for roads and other travel networks.
Expenditures – These questions provide information on expenses related to child care and support payments. Along with the income information obtained from personal income tax and benefit records, these questions are used to derive disposable income to measure poverty in Canada. This information is also used to better understand the use of child care and the role of support payments in Canadian society.
Housing – These questions provide information used to develop housing communities and projects. Information on the number of rooms and bedrooms in homes, and on housing costs, is used to assess levels of crowding within dwellings and housing affordability. Such indicators are used by numerous organizations to help develop housing programs supporting the housing needs of Canadians.
Information on the age of dwellings and the need for repairs is used by municipalities to develop neighbourhood improvement programs.
Your participation is important. Please complete your questionnaire today.
| Geography | CVs for operating revenue |
|---|---|
| percent | |
| Canada | 0.49 |
| Newfoundland and Labrador | 1.07 |
| Prince Edward Island | 0.68 |
| Nova Scotia | 0.56 |
| New Brunswick | 0.12 |
| Quebec | 1.39 |
| Ontario | 1.02 |
| Manitoba | 0.30 |
| Saskatchewan | 0.43 |
| Alberta | 0.85 |
| British Columbia | 0.34 |
| Yukon | 0.60 |
| Northwest Territories | 0.00 |
| Nunavut | 0.00 |
This survey collects data on capital and repair expenditures in Canada. The information is used by Federal and Provincial government departments and agencies, trade associations, universities and international organizations for policy development and as a measure of regional economic activity.
Your information may also be used by Statistics Canada for other statistical and research purposes.
Your participation in this survey is required under the authority of the Statistics Act.
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.
Approved disclosure
Section 17 of the federal Statistics Act allows for the disclosure of certain information relating to an individual, business or organization. Statistics Canada will only disclose information where there is a demonstrated statistical need and for the public good, and when it will not harm individuals, organizations or businesses if data were disclosed. For the Capital and Repair Expenditures Survey, The Chief Statistician has authorized the release of data relating to carriers, public utilities and non-commercial institutions including, but not limited to, hospitals, libraries, educational institutions, federal government entities and individual provincial, territorial and municipal governments. These include capital and repair expenditure expenditures at the aggregate level.
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.esd-helpdesk-dse-bureaudedepannage.statcan@statcan.gc.ca or by fax at 613-951-6583.
For this survey, there are Section 12 agreements with the statistical agencies of Prince Edward Island, the Northwest Territories and Nunavut as well as Environment and Climate Change Canada, Infrastructure Canada, the Canada Energy Regulator, Natural Resources Canada and Sustainability Development Technology Canada.
For agreements with provincial and territorial government organizations, the shared data will be limited to information pertaining to business establishments located within the jurisdiction of the respective province or territory.
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.
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.
3. Verify or provide the current operational status of the business or organization identified by the legal and operating name above.
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
5. You indicated that Secondary activity is not the current main activity.
Was this business or organization's main activity ever classified as: Secondary activity?
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)
Enter keywords or a brief description, then press the Search button
What are Capital Expenditures?
Capital Expenditures are the gross expenditures on fixed assets for use in the operations of your organization or for lease or rent to others. Gross expenditures are expenditures before deducting proceeds from disposals, and credits (capital grants, donations, government assistance and investment tax credits).
Fixed assets are also known as capital assets or property, plant and equipment. They are items with a useful life of more than one year and are not purchased for resale but rather for use in the entity's production of goods and services. Examples are buildings, vehicles, leasehold improvements, furniture and fixtures, machinery, and computer software.
Include:
Exclude:
How to Treat Leases
Include:
Exclude:
What are Repair Expenditures?
Non-capitalized repair and maintenance expenditures are that portion of current or operating expenditures charged against revenue in the year incurred and made for the purpose of keeping the stock of fixed assets in good working condition during the life originally intended.
Repair and maintenance allow such fixed assets to operate at output producing capacity during the asset life without undue amounts of down time (preventive function). A second purpose is the returning of any portion of the stock of fixed assets into a state of good working condition after any malfunctioning or reduced efficiency for whatever reason (curative function) short of replacement of such fixed assets or adding significantly to their life or productive efficiency.
Maintenance expenditures on buildings and other structures may include the routine care of assets such as janitorial services, snow removal and/or salting and sanding by the firm's own employees or persons outside the firm's employ. Maintenance expenditures on machinery and equipment may include oil change and lubrication of vehicles and machinery.
1. What are the start and end dates of this organization's fiscal year for this survey?
Note: For this survey, the end date should fall between April 1, 2023 and March 31, 2024.
Here are twelve common fiscal periods that fall within the targeted dates:
Here are other examples of fiscal periods that fall within the required dates:
2. What is the reason the reporting period does not cover a full year?
Select all that apply.
3. Throughout this questionnaire, please report financial information in thousands of Canadian dollars.
For example, an amount of $763,880.25 should be reported as:
CAN$ '000 : $ 764,000
I will report in the format above
1. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's total capital and repair expenditures for the following categories?
Include acquisitions, renovations, leasehold improvements, and additions to work in progress.
Exclude asset transfers and business acquisitions.
A) Gross capital expenditures, excluding land
Include:
How to Treat Leases
Include:
Exclude: assets acquired for lease to others, either as a capital or financial lease.
Information for Government Departments
The following applies to government departments only:
B) Non-capitalized repair and maintenance expenditures
This represents the repair and maintenance of assets in contrast to the acquisition of assets or the renovation of assets.
Include:
C) Land
Total should include all costs associated with the purchase of the land that are not amortized or depreciated. Improvements of land should be reported in Gross capital expenditures, excluding land.
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| Gross capital expenditures, excluding land | |
| Non-capitalized repair and maintenance expenditures | |
| Land |
2. What is the total dollar value of your capital work in progress (buildings, other construction, machinery and equipment, software) at year end?
These capital costs should be reported as Capital Expenditures in the year that they occurred.
Work in progress: Work in progress represents accumulated costs since the start of capital projects which are intended to be capitalized upon completion.
If there has been a launch of a major project or expansion of an existing project, please provide the nature, location, and (if applicable) the name(s) / title(s) of the project in the comment section of the questionnaire.
CAN$ '000
3. You have reported that no capital or repair expenditures were incurred for the operations covered by this questionnaire. Please indicate the reason.
Select all that apply.
This questionnaire will collect data on capital and repair expenditures by type of asset and according to the function for which the asset is used.
This questionnaire contains 5 sections:
1. Identification of the functions (economic/social objective or purpose) of the capital and repair expenditures incurred during the year.
Examples:
A capital expenditure for the acquisition of office furniture for a hospital.
The function of this acquisition is hospital services.
A capital expenditure for the construction of waste disposal facilities at a school for their own use.
The function of this expenditures is education.
2. Identification of the assets that were acquired during the year for each function. For each asset identified, capital expenditures are collected according to the following:
3. Source of funding for the total capital expenditures by function. The sources of funding requested are the subsidies, grants and contributions received from each level of government, as well as all other sources combined.
4. Non-capitalized repair and maintenance expenditures by function. Report the part of operating costs that are incurred to maintain the intended use of non-residential tangible assets (buildings, machinery, computers, etc.). Capital expenditures are excluded.
5. Identification of internal costs capitalized. Breakdown of expenditures on own account work (internal work) by salaries and wages, material and supplies and other charges for:
6. Identification of assets that were disposed of or sold during the year. For each asset, include the selling price if applicable, gross book value (total accumulated cost) and age.
Additional information
If an asset or source of funding is unable to be coded according to the function it serves, it should be assigned to a similar unit within the organization. It is possible that a unit within an organization may perform more than one function, in this case costs should be allocated by referring to the proportion of work-months devoted to each function. For multifunction units, it is acceptable to allocate costs to whichever function appears to have the largest portion of total expenditures.
4. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what type of activities received capital or repair expenditures?
The formulation, administration, coordination and monitoring of overall policies, plans, and programmes related to a specific function should be included with that function. Any basic research, applied research and experimental development activities related to a specific function should be included with that function.
Select all that apply.
Type of activity is based upon the Classification of the Functions of Government (COFOG), which classifies expenditure data by the purpose for which the funds are used (according to the socio-economic objectives that institutional units aim to achieve through the spending).
Road transport: Includes expenditures on road transport systems and facilities. Excludes road traffic control (see Defense, public order and safety), construction of noise embankments, hedges and other anti-noise facilities including the resurfacing of sections of urban highways with noise reducing surfaces (see Other environmental protection not elsewhere classified).
Public transit: Includes expenditures on local and suburban mass passenger transit systems. These establishments operate over fixed routes and schedules, and allow passengers to pay on a per-trip basis. Excludes passenger transportation associated with scenic or sightseeing activities (see Tourism), and transportation services without fixed routes and schedules.
Other transport not elsewhere classified (n.e.c): Includes expenditures on inland, coastal and ocean water, railway, air and other transport systems and facilities.
Water supply: Includes expenditures on water supply systems. Excludes collection and treatment of waste water (see Waste water management).
Community amenities not elsewhere classified (n.e.c.): Includes expenditures relating to housing/community amenities. Excludes plan implementation, that is, the actual construction of community amenities, administration of construction standards (see Agriculture, forestry, fishing, hunting, mining, manufacturing, and construction).
Storm water management: Includes expenditures on rain or storm water management systems.
Waste water management: Includes expenditures on sewage systems and waste water treatment.
Waste management: Includes expenditures on waste collection, treatment and disposal systems.
Other community amenities and environmental protection: Includes expenditures related to environmental protection. This group covers activities relating to ambient air and climate protection, soil and groundwater protection, noise and vibration abatement, protection against radiation, protection of fauna and flora species and habitats, and the protection of landscapes for their aesthetic values.
Defense, public order and safety: Includes expenditures on police services, fire protection services, prisons, law courts, other places for the detention or rehabilitation of criminals, military or civil defence affairs and services, and of foreign military aid.
Hospital services: Includes expenditures on hospitals, medical centres, maternity centres, nursing homes and convalescent homes which chiefly provide in-patient services. Excludes clinics and dispensaries devoted exclusively to outpatient care (see Health except hospital services), institutions for disabled persons and rehabilitation centres providing primarily long-term support (see Social protection), and retirement homes for elderly persons (see Social protection).
Health except hospital services: Includes expenditures on medical, dental and paramedical services delivered to outpatients by practitioners and auxiliaries. The services may be delivered at home, in individual or group consulting facilities, dispensaries or the outpatient clinics of hospitals and the like.
Housing: Includes expenditures on social protection in the form of benefits in kind to help households meet the cost of housing (recipients of these benefits are means-tested).
Other health and social protection: Includes expenditures related to sickness and disability, old age, and family and children.
Education: Includes expenditures on all levels of education (primary, secondary and post-secondary) and expenditures on vocational training and cultural development. The provision of subsidiary services to education and the transportation, food, lodging, medical and dental care and related subsidiary services chiefly for students regardless of level.
Recreation, culture and religion: Includes expenditures for the provision of sporting, recreational, and cultural services and the operation or support of broadcasting and publishing services, activities to support teams or individual competitors or players, individual artists, writers, designers, composers and others working in the arts, or to organizations engaged in promoting cultural activities. Excludes sporting and recreational facilities associated with educational institutions (see Education), government printing offices and plants (see General public services), provision of education by radio or television broadcasting (see Education).
Electricity: Includes expenditures on the generation, transmission and distribution of electricity. This class covers both traditional sources of electricity, hydro supplies and newer sources.
Fuel and energy: Includes expenditures on fuel and energy affairs and services, except electricity.
Tourism: Includes expenditures on tourism affairs and services, including liaison with the transport, hotel and restaurant industries and other industries benefiting from the presence of tourists, and the organization of advertising campaigns.
General economic, commercial, and labour affairs: Includes expenditures on general economic, commercial and labour affairs and services.
Agriculture, forestry, fishing, hunting, mining, manufacturing, and construction: Includes expenditures on agricultural, forestry, fishing, hunting, mining, manufacturing, and construction industry affairs and services. Excludes petroleum refineries (see Fuel and energy).
Other economic affairs not elsewhere classified (n.e.c.): Includes expenditures on communication systems (postal, telephone, telegraph, wireless and satellite communication systems), hotels and restaurants, distributive trade and the storage and warehousing industry, price control and rationing schemes operating through retailers or wholesalers regardless of the type of goods involved or intended consumer. Excludes radio and television broadcasting systems (see Recreation, culture, and religion).
General public services: Includes expenditures on executive and legislative organs, financial and fiscal affairs, external affairs, foreign economic aid and other general services, basic research, R&D general public services.
Transportation
Road transport
e.g., roads, highways, bridges, tunnels, parking facilities
Public transit
e.g., light rail, subways and streetcars, buses, ferry service
Other
e.g., airports, seaports, railways
Specify other transport
Community amenities and environmental protection
Water supply
Include potable water.
Exclude waste water.
Community amenities not elsewhere classified (n.e.c.)
e.g., zoning, urban planning, building codes, supervision and regulation
Storm water management
e.g., storm sewers, berms, floodways, water retention ponds
Waste water management
Include sewage systems, waste water treatment.
Exclude storm water.
Waste management
e.g., collection, treatment and disposal systems for solid waste, nuclear waste
Exclude waste water.
Other
e.g., anti-noise facilities, abandoned mines
Specify other community amenities and environmental protection
Defense, public order and safety
Defense, public order and safety
e.g., prisons, law courts, fire protection, police, military
Health and social protection
Hospital services
Health services
e.g., medical clinics, blood banks, medical laboratories, x-ray centres, dental clinics, optometrists
Exclude hospital services.
Housing
e.g., affordable or social housing
Other
e.g., shelters, orphanages, and other lodging housing for persons with special needs
Specify other health and social protection
Education, recreation, culture and religion
Education
e.g., schools, vocational training, police colleges
Recreation, culture, and religion
e.g., libraries, museums, sports facilities
Electricity and fuel
Electricity
e.g., electric power generation, transmission, distribution, regulation
Fuel and energy
e.g., natural gas distribution mains, oil wells, coal and uranium mines, petroleum refineries
Exclude electricity.
Economic, commercial and labour affairs
Tourism
e.g., tourist offices, tramways, gondolas
General economic, commercial, and labour affairs
e.g., regulation and support of international trade, supervision of the banking industry, consumer protection
Agriculture, forestry, fishing, hunting, mining, manufacturing, and construction
e.g., fishing boats, manufacturing equipment, irrigation and drainage systems for agriculture, office for issuance of licenses
and leases, vehicles and laboratories for inspections
Other
e.g., telecommunication networks, hotels and restaurants, retail stores
Specify other economic, commercial and labour affairs
General public services
General public services
e.g., parliament, centralized services, research institutes, advisory boards, customs authorities, public funds/debt management, auditor services, elections, town councils
Other function
Other
Specify other function
5. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what type of assets received capital expenditures for road transport?
Include:
Select all that apply.
Road transport: The administration of affairs and services concerning operation, use, construction and maintenance of road transport systems and facilities (roads, bridges, tunnels, parking facilities, etc.).
Includes:
Excludes:
Non-residential construction
Industrial service buildings and depots
e.g., maintenance garages, storage facilities
Office and administrative buildings
Other buildings
Specify other buildings
Highway and road structures, and networks
e.g., signs, guardrails, lighting, landscaping, sidewalks, bicycle paths, pedestrian lanes, traffic control infrastructure
Bridges
e.g., overpasses
Tunnels
Parking lots and parking garages
e.g., associated electric car charging stations
Flood protection infrastructure
e.g., storm sewers, drains, pipes, dams, reservoirs
Other transportation infrastructure
e.g., motor vehicle inspection stations, weigh stations
Other infrastructure
Specify other infrastructure
Machinery and equipment
Medium and heavy-duty trucks
Include road vehicles designed primarily for transportation of goods with a gross vehicle weight rating of more than 5 tonnes.
Materials handling trucks and tractors
Include transfer cars for material handling, wheelbarrows, forklifts.
Exclude bulldozers, front-end loaders, earth moving machinery (see Construction machinery and equipment).
Special-purpose vehicles
Include street flushers, tow trucks, vehicle mounted snow plows, etc.
Exclude gravel spreaders, surfacers, concrete paving equipment, bulldozers, front-end loaders, earth moving machinery (see Construction machinery and equipment).
Freight and utility trailers
Construction machinery and equipment
Include concrete vibrators, cranes, concrete mixers, levellers, compacting machines, bulldozers, excavators, road tamper, dredgers.
Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs
Measuring, control and scientific instruments
e.g., counting devices, parking meters
Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment
e.g., traffic control equipment, surveillance cameras
Computers and peripherals
Office furniture
Other machinery and equipment
Specify other machinery and equipment
Software
Pre-packaged software
Custom-designed software
e.g., contract and in-house development
6. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's capital expenditures for road transport?
Report in thousands of Canadian dollars.
A) New acquisitions and additions: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
B) Acquisitions of used assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately.
C) Refurbishment and renovations: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected useful life (years): Report the expected life of the asset in years.
Affordable Housing: Include rental housing subsidized by the government. Exclude temporary shelters and housing without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Other Residential Construction: Include the housing portion of multi-purpose projects and of townsites, excluding affordable housing. Exclude buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizens residences) and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Non-Residential assets: expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential buildings, engineering construction, machinery, and equipment (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) | |
|---|---|---|
| Industrial service buildings and depots | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office and administrative buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Highway and road structures, and networks | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Bridges | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Tunnels | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Parking lots and parking garages | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Flood protection infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other transportation infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Medium and heavy-duty trucks | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Materials handling trucks and tractors | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Special-purpose vehicles | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Freight and utility trailers | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Construction machinery and equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Measuring, control and scientific instruments | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Computers and peripherals | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office furniture | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other machinery and equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pre-packaged software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Custom-designed software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures |
7. This is a summary of the expenditures reported for road transport.
Note: You cannot make changes to this page.
Please review the values and, if needed press the Previous button at the bottom of the page to navigate to the previous pages to make any modifications.
| Capital expenditures | |
|---|---|
| Industrial service buildings and depots | |
| Office and administrative buildings | |
| Other buildings | |
| Highway and road structures, and networks | |
| Bridges | |
| Tunnels | |
| Parking lots and parking garages | |
| Flood Protection Infrastructure | |
| Other transportation infrastructure | |
| Other infrastructure | |
| Total non-residential construction | |
| Medium and heavy-duty trucks | |
| Materials handling trucks and tractors | |
| Special-purpose vehicles | |
| Freight and utility trailers | |
| Construction machinery and equipment | |
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | |
| Measuring, control and scientific instruments | |
| Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment | |
| Computers and peripherals | |
| Office furniture | |
| Other machinery and equipment | |
| Total machinery and equipment | |
| Pre-packaged software | |
| Custom-designed software | |
| Total software | |
| Total expenditures |
8. Provide the source of funding breakdown of the expenditures previously provided for road transport.
Note: Sum of a to d should be equal to total capital expenditures reported for road transport in question 7.
Sources of funding includes government grants, donations, credit and venture capital from external sources according to the level of government (federal, provincial/territorial, and local/regional/municipal). All other sources including internal funding (sales of goods and services, loans, etc.) as well as donations and grants from private sources can be combined under Private and other sources of funding.
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| Municipal or regional government grants and contributions | |
| Provincial and territorial government grants and contributions | |
| Federal government grants and contributions | |
| Private, internal and other sources of funding |
9. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what type of assets received capital expenditures for public transit?
Include:
Select all that apply.
Public transit: The administration of affairs and services concerning operating, use, construction and maintenance of local and suburban mass passenger transit systems. Such systems may involve the use of one or more modes of transport including ferry services, light rail, subways and streetcars, as well as buses and bus terminals. These establishments operate over fixed routes and schedules, and allow passengers to pay on a per-trip basis.
Excludes:
Non-residential construction
Industrial service buildings and depots
e.g., maintenance garages, storage facilities
Passenger terminal buildings and airports
e.g., heliports
Service stations
e.g., gas stations
Office and administrative buildings
Other buildings
Specify other buildings
Parking lots and parking garages
e.g., associated electric car charging stations
Transit shelters
Highway and road structures, and networks
e.g., signs, guardrails, lighting, landscaping, sidewalks, fences, traffic control infrastructure
Bridges
e.g., overpasses
Tunnels
Railway lines and tracks, including light-rail
e.g., signs, lighting, security and traffic control infrastructure
Other transportation infrastructure
e.g., motor vehicle inspection stations, weigh stations
Waste disposal facilities
Other infrastructure
Specify other infrastructure
Machinery and equipment
Buses
e.g., vans of a seating capacity of 10 persons or more, electric trackless trolley coaches
Special-purpose vehicles
e.g., trucks fitted with elevator platforms, tow trucks
Locomotives, railway rolling stock, and rapid transit equipment
Ferries and boats
Medium and heavy-duty trucks
e.g., road vehicles designed primarily for transportation of goods with a gross vehicle weight rating of more than 5 tonnes
Materials handling trucks and tractors
e.g., lifting machinery, forklift trucks
Other materials handling equipment
e.g., winches, aerial work platforms, hoists, conveyors
Other transportation equipment
e.g., all-terrain vehicles
Navigational and guidance instruments
e.g., ultrasonic detecting equipment, radio navigational aid, radio direction finders
Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment
e.g., traffic control equipment, surveillance cameras
Telephone and data communications equipment
e.g., fax machines, telephone switching, local area routers, smartphones
Measuring, control and scientific instruments
e.g., counting devices, parking meters
Powered hand tools
Computers and peripherals
Office furniture
Furniture and fixtures, except office furniture
Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs
Other machinery and equipment
Specify other machinery and equipment
Software
Pre-packaged software
Custom-designed software
e.g., contract and in-house development
10. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's capital expenditures for public transit?
Report in thousands of Canadian dollars.
A) New acquisitions and additions: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
B) Acquisitions of used assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately.
C) Refurbishment and renovations: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected useful life (years): Report the expected life of the asset in years.
Affordable Housing: Include rental housing subsidized by the government. Exclude temporary shelters and housing without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Other Residential Construction: Include the housing portion of multi-purpose projects and of townsites, excluding affordable housing. Exclude buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizens residences) and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Non-Residential assets: expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential buildings, engineering construction, machinery, and equipment (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) |
|
|---|---|---|
| Industrial service buildings and depots | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Passenger terminal buildings and airports | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Service stations | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office and administrative buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Parking lots and parking garages | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Transit shelters | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Highway and road structures, and networks | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Bridges | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Tunnels | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Railway lines and tracks, including light-rail | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other transportation infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Waste disposal facilities | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Buses | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Special-purpose vehicles | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Locomotives, railway rolling stock, and rapid transit equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Ferries and boats | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Medium and heavy-duty trucks | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Materials handling trucks and tractors | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other materials handling equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other transportation equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Navigational and guidance instruments | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Telephone and data communications equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Measuring, control and scientific instruments | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Powered hand tools | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Computers and peripherals | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office furniture | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Furniture and fixtures, except office furniture | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other machinery and equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pre-packaged software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Custom-designed software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures |
11. This is a summary of the expenditures reported for public transit.
Note: You cannot make changes to this page.
Please review the values and, if needed press the Previous button at the bottom of the page to navigate to the previous pages to make any modifications.
| Capital expenditures | |
|---|---|
| Industrial service buildings and depots | |
| Passenger terminal buildings and airports | |
| Service stations | |
| Office and administrative buildings | |
| Other buildings | |
| Parking lots and parking garages | |
| Transit shelters | |
| Highway, road structures and networks | |
| Bridges | |
| Tunnels | |
| Railway lines and tracks, including light-rail | |
| Other transportation infrastructure | |
| Waste disposal facilities | |
| Other infrastructure | |
| Total non-residential construction | |
| Buses | |
| Special-purpose vehicles | |
| Locomotives, railway rolling stock, and rapid transit equipment | |
| Ferries and boats | |
| Medium and heavy-duty trucks | |
| Materials handling trucks and tractors | |
| Other materials handling equipment | |
| Other transportation equipment | |
| Navigational and guidance instruments | |
| Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment | |
| Telephone and data communications equipment | |
| Measuring, control and scientific instruments | |
| Powered hand tools | |
| Computers and peripherals | |
| Office furniture | |
| Furniture and fixtures, except office furniture | |
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | |
| Other machinery and equipment | |
| Total machinery and equipment | |
| Pre-packaged software | |
| Custom-designed software | |
| Total software | |
| Total expenditures |
12. Provide the source of funding breakdown of the capital expenditures previously provided for public transit.
Note: Sum of a to d should be equal to total capital expenditures reported for public transit in question 11.
Sources of funding includes government grants, donations, credit and venture capital from external sources according to the level of government (federal, provincial/territorial, and local/regional/municipal). All other sources including internal funding (sales of goods and services, loans, etc.) as well as donations and grants from private sources can be combined under Private and other sources of funding.
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| Municipal or regional government grants and contributions | |
| Provincial and territorial government grants and contributions | |
| Federal government grants and contributions | |
| Private, internal and other sources of funding |
13. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what type of assets received capital expenditures for other transport not elsewhere classified (n.e.c.)?
Include:
Select all that apply.
Other transport not elsewhere classified (n.e.c.): The administration of affairs and services concerning operation, use, construction and maintenance of inland, coastal and ocean water, railway, air and other transport systems and facilities.
Includes:
Excludes:
Non-residential construction
Passenger terminal buildings and airports
e.g., heliports, railway stations, boat passenger terminals
Industrial service buildings and depots
e.g., maintenance garages, storage facilities
Office and administrative buildings
Other buildings
Specify other buildings
Highway and road structures, and networks
e.g., signs, guardrails, lighting, landscaping, sidewalks, fences
Parking lots and parking garages
e.g., associated electric car charging stations
Railway lines
Runways
e.g., airfields, heliport terminal, tarmac, runway lighting
Bridges
e.g., overpasses
Tunnels
Marinas
Seaports and harbours
Canals and waterways
Other marine infrastructure
Other transportation infrastructure
e.g., motor vehicle inspection stations, weigh stations
Other infrastructure
Specify other infrastructure
Machinery and equipment
Aircraft
Locomotives, railway rolling stock, and rapid transit equipment
Non-military ships, barges and platforms
e.g., ferry boats, tug boats
Other boats and personal watercraft
Buses
e.g., vans of a seating capacity of 10 persons or more, electric trackless trolley coaches
Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs
Special-purpose vehicles
e.g., street flushers, tow trucks, vehicle mounted snow plows
Materials handling trucks and tractors
Other materials handling equipment
e.g., winches, aerial work platforms, hoists, conveyors, etc.
Navigational and guidance instruments
e.g., ultrasonic detecting equipment, radio navigational aid, radio direction finders
Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment
e.g., traffic control equipment, surveillance cameras
Measuring, control and scientific instruments
e.g., counting devices, parking meters
Televisions and other audio and video equipment
Computers and peripherals
Office furniture
Other machinery and equipment
Specify other machinery and equipment
Software
Pre-packaged software
Custom-designed software
e.g., contract and in-house development
14. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's capital expenditures for other transport not elsewhere classified (n.e.c)?
Report in thousands of Canadian dollars.
A) New acquisitions and additions: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
B) Acquisitions of used assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately.
C) Refurbishment and renovations: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected useful life (years): Report the expected life of the asset in years.
Affordable Housing: Include rental housing subsidized by the government. Exclude temporary shelters and housing without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Other Residential Construction: Include the housing portion of multi-purpose projects and of townsites, excluding affordable housing. Exclude buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizens residences) and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Non-Residential assets: expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential buildings, engineering construction, machinery, and equipment (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) |
|
|---|---|---|
| Passenger terminal buildings and airports | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Industrial service buildings and depots | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office and administrative buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Highway and road structures, and networks | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Parking lots and parking garages | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Railway lines | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Runways | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Bridges | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Tunnels | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Marinas | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Seaports and harbours | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Canals and waterways | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other marine infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other transportation infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Aircraft | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Locomotives, railway rolling stock, and rapid transit equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Non-military ships, barges and platforms | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other boats and personal watercraft | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Buses | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Special-purpose vehicles | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Materials handling trucks and tractors | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other materials handling equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Navigational and guidance instruments | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Measuring, control and scientific instruments | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Televisions and other audio and video equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Computers and peripherals | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office furniture | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other machinery and equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pre-packaged software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Custom-designed software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures |
15. This is a summary of the expenditures reported for other transport not elsewhere classified (n.e.c.).
Note: You cannot make changes to this page.
Please review the values and, if needed press the Previous button at the bottom of the page to navigate to the previous pages to make any modifications.
| Capital expenditures | |
|---|---|
| Passenger terminal buildings and airports | |
| Industrial service buildings and depots | |
| Office and administrative buildings | |
| Other buildings | |
| Highway and road structures, and networks | |
| Parking lots and parking garages | |
| Railway lines | |
| Runways | |
| Bridges | |
| Tunnels | |
| Marinas | |
| Seaports and harbours | |
| Canals and waterways | |
| Other marine infrastructure | |
| Other transportation infrastructure | |
| Other infrastructure | |
| Total non-residential construction | |
| Aircraft | |
| Locomotives, railway rolling stock, and rapid transit equipment | |
| Non-military ships, barges and platforms | |
| Other boats and personal watercraft | |
| Buses | |
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | |
| Special-purpose vehicles | |
| Materials handling trucks and tractors | |
| Other materials handling equipment | |
| Navigational and guidance instruments | |
| Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment | |
| Measuring, control and scientific instruments | |
| Televisions and other audio and video equipment | |
| Computers and peripherals | |
| Office furniture | |
| Other machinery and equipment | |
| Total machinery and equipment | |
| Pre-packaged software | |
| Custom-designed software | |
| Total software | |
| Total expenditures |
16. Provide the source of funding breakdown of the capital expenditures previously provided for other transport not elsewhere classified (n.e.c.).
Note: Sum of a to d should be equal to total capital expenditures reported for other transport not elsewhere classified (n.e.c) in question 15.
Sources of funding includes government grants, donations, credit and venture capital from external sources according to the level of government (federal, provincial/territorial, and local/regional/municipal). All other sources including internal funding (sales of goods and services, loans, etc.) as well as donations and grants from private sources can be combined under Private and other sources of funding.
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| Municipal or regional government grants and contributions | |
| Provincial and territorial government grants and contributions | |
| Federal government grants and contributions | |
| Private, internal and other sources of funding |
17. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what type of assets received capital expenditures for water supply?
Include:
Select all that apply.
Water supply: The administration of water supply affairs.
Includes:
Excludes:
Non-residential construction
Industrial service buildings and depots
e.g., maintenance garages, storage facilities
Office and administrative buildings
Other buildings
Exclude Water filtration and treatment plants.
Specify other buildings
Water filtration and treatment plants
Water supply infrastructure
e.g., aquaducts mains, trunk and distribution mains, water reservoirs, water wells, fill stations
Other infrastructure
Specify other infrastructure
Machinery and equipment
Water treatment equipment
Filters and strainers for fluids and fluid power systems
Pumps and compressors
Boilers, metal tanks, industrial valves and seals
Measuring, control, and scientific instruments
Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment
Televisions and other audio and video equipment
Computers and peripherals
Office furniture
Other machinery and equipment
Specify other machinery and equipment
Software
Pre-packaged software
Custom-designed software
e.g., contract and in-house development
18. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's capital expenditures for water supply?
Report in thousands of Canadian dollars.
A) New acquisitions and additions: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
B) Acquisitions of used assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately.
C) Refurbishment and renovations: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected useful life (years): Report the expected life of the asset in years.
Affordable Housing: Include rental housing subsidized by the government. Exclude temporary shelters and housing without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Other Residential Construction: Include the housing portion of multi-purpose projects and of townsites, excluding affordable housing. Exclude buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizens residences) and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Non-Residential assets: expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential buildings, engineering construction, machinery, and equipment (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) |
|
|---|---|---|
| Industrial service buildings and depots | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office and administrative buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Water filtration and treatment plants | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Water supply infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Water treatment equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Filters and strainers for fluids and fluid power systems | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pumps and compressors | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Boilers, metal tanks, industrial valves and seals | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Measuring, control, and scientific instruments | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Televisions and other audio and video equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Computers and peripherals | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office furniture | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other machinery and equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pre-packaged software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Custom-designed software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures |
19. This is a summary of the expenditures reported for water supply.
Note: You cannot make changes to this page.
Please review the values and, if needed press the Previous button at the bottom of the page to navigate to the previous pages to make any modifications.
| Capital expenditures | |
|---|---|
| Industrial service buildings and depots | |
| Office and administrative buildings | |
| Other buildings | |
| Water filtration and treatment plants | |
| Water supply infrastructure | |
| Other infrastructure | |
| Total non-residential construction | |
| Water treatment equipment | |
| Filters and strainers for fluids and fluid power systems | |
| Pumps and compressors | |
| Boilers, metal tanks, industrial valves and seals | |
| Measuring, control, and scientific instruments | |
| Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment | |
| Televisions and other audio and video equipment | |
| Computers and peripherals | |
| Office furniture | |
| Other machinery and equipment | |
| Total machinery and equipment | |
| Pre-packaged software | |
| Custom-designed software | |
| Total software | |
| Total expenditures |
20. Provide the source of funding breakdown of the capital expenditures previously provided for water supply.
Note: Sum of a to d should be equal to total capital expenditures reported for water supply in question 19.
Sources of funding includes government grants, donations, credit and venture capital from external sources according to the level of government (federal, provincial/territorial, and local/regional/municipal). All other sources including internal funding (sales of goods and services, loans, etc.) as well as donations and grants from private sources can be combined under Private and other sources of funding.
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| Municipal or regional government grants and contributions | |
| Provincial and territorial government grants and contributions | |
| Federal government grants and contributions | |
| Private, internal and other sources of funding |
21. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what type of assets received capital expenditures for community amenities not elsewhere classified (n.e.c.)?
Include:
Select all that apply.
Community amenities not elsewhere classified (n.e.c.): The administration of housing development affairs and services, promotion, monitoring and evaluation of housing development activities whether or not the activities are under the auspices of public authorities. Also included are activities such as formulation, administration, coordination and monitoring of overall policies, plans, programmes and budgets relating to housing and community amenities, preparation and enforcement of legislation and standards relating to housing and community amenities, production and dissemination of general information, technical documentation and statistics relating to housing and community amenities.
Includes:
Excludes:
Residential construction
Other residential buildings
e.g., buildings that provide accommodation units with self-contained and exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities to the occupants of each unit
Non-residential construction
Office and administrative buildings
Industrial laboratories, research and development centres
Industrial service buildings and depots
e.g., maintenance garages, storage facilities
Other buildings
Specify other buildings
Parking lots and parking garages
e.g., associated electric car charging stations
Highway and road structures, and networks
e.g., signs, guardrails, lighting, sidewalks, fences
Other infrastructure
Specify other infrastructure
Machinery and equipment
Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs
Special-purpose vehicles
e.g., fire trucks, tow trucks, vehicle mounted snow plows
Powered hand tools
Pumps and compressors
Other transportation equipment
e.g., all-terrain vehicles
Medical, dental, and personal safety supplies
Playground, gymnasium, exercise, and other athletic equipment
Telephone and data communications equipment
e.g., fax machines, telephone switching, local area routers, smartphones
Televisions and other audio and video equipment
Computers and peripherals
Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines
Office furniture
Other machinery and equipment
Specify other machinery and equipment
Software
Pre-packaged software
Custom-designed software
e.g., contract and in-house development
22. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's capital expenditures for community amenities not elsewhere classified (n.e.c.)?
Report in thousands of Canadian dollars.
A) New acquisitions and additions: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
B) Acquisitions of used assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately.
C) Refurbishment and renovations: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected useful life (years): Report the expected life of the asset in years.
Affordable Housing: Include rental housing subsidized by the government. Exclude temporary shelters and housing without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Other Residential Construction: Include the housing portion of multi-purpose projects and of townsites, excluding affordable housing. Exclude buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizens residences) and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Non-Residential assets: expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential buildings, engineering construction, machinery, and equipment (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) |
|
|---|---|---|
| Other residential buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office and administrative buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Industrial laboratories, research and development centres | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Industrial service buildings and depots | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Parking lots and parking garages | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Highway and road structures, and networks | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Special-purpose vehicles | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Powered hand tools | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pumps and compressors | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other transportation equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Medical, dental, and personal safety supplies | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Playground, gymnasium, exercise, and other athletic equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Telephone and data communications equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Televisions and other audio and video equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Computers and peripherals | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office furniture | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other machinery and equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pre-packaged software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Custom-designed software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures |
23. This is a summary of the expenditures reported for community amenities not elsewhere classified (n.e.c.).
Note: You cannot make changes to this page.
Please review the values and, if needed press the Previous button at the bottom of the page to navigate to the previous pages to make any modifications.
| Capital expenditures | |
|---|---|
| Other residential buildings | |
| Total residential buildings | |
| Office and administrative buildings | |
| Industrial laboratories, research and development centres | |
| Industrial service buildings and depots | |
| Other buildings | |
| Parking lots and parking garages | |
| Highway and road structures, and networks | |
| Other infrastructure | |
| Total non-residential construction | |
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | |
| Special-purpose vehicles | |
| Powered hand tools | |
| Pumps and compressors | |
| Other transportation equipment | |
| Medical, dental, and personal safety supplies | |
| Playground, gymnasium, exercise, and other athletic equipment | |
| Telephone and data communications equipment | |
| Televisions and other audio and video equipment | |
| Computers and peripherals | |
| Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines | |
| Office furniture | |
| Other machinery and equipment | |
| Total machinery and equipment | |
| Pre-packaged software | |
| Custom-designed software | |
| Total software | |
| Total expenditures |
24. Provide the source of funding breakdown of the capital expenditures previously provided for community amenities not elsewhere classified (n.e.c.).
Note: Sum of a to d should be equal to total capital expenditures reported for community amenities not elsewhere classified (n.e.c.) in question 23.
Sources of funding includes government grants, donations, credit and venture capital from external sources according to the level of government (federal, provincial/territorial, and local/regional/municipal). All other sources including internal funding (sales of goods and services, loans, etc.) as well as donations and grants from private sources can be combined under Private and other sources of funding.
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| Municipal or regional government grants and contributions | |
| Provincial and territorial government grants and contributions | |
| Federal government grants and contributions | |
| Private, internal and other sources of funding |
25. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what type of assets received capital expenditures for storm water management?
Include:
Select all that apply.
Storm water management: The administration, supervision, inspection, operation or support of rain or storm water management systems, including activities to support the operation, construction, maintenance or upgrading of such systems.
Includes: system of collectors, pipelines, conduits and pumps to evacuate any rainwater from the points of generation to either a sewage system or to a point where rain water is discharged to surface water.
Non-residential construction
Office and administrative buildings
Industrial service buildings and depots
e.g., maintenance garages, storage facilities
Other buildings
Specify other buildings
Flood protection infrastructure
e.g., storm sewers, drains, pipes, dams, reservoirs
Pollution abatement and control
Highway and road structures and networks
e.g., signs, guardrails, lighting, landscaping, sidewalks, fences
Other infrastructure
Specify other infrastructure
Machinery and equipment
Filters and strainers for fluids and fluid power systems
Water treatment equipment
Pumps and compressors
Special-purpose vehicles
e.g., trucks for refuse collection
Medium and heavy-duty trucks
Boilers, metal tanks, industrial valves and seals
Measuring, control, and scientific instruments
Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment
Televisions and other audio and video equipment
Computers and peripherals
Office furniture
Other machinery and equipment
Specify other machinery and equipment
Software
Pre-packaged software
Custom-designed software
e.g., contract and in-house development
26. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's capital expenditures for storm water management?
Report in thousands of Canadian dollars.
A) New acquisitions and additions: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
B) Acquisitions of used assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately.
C) Refurbishment and renovations: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected useful life (years): Report the expected life of the asset in years.
Affordable Housing: Include rental housing subsidized by the government. Exclude temporary shelters and housing without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Other Residential Construction: Include the housing portion of multi-purpose projects and of townsites, excluding affordable housing. Exclude buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizens residences) and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Non-Residential assets: expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential buildings, engineering construction, machinery, and equipment (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) |
|
|---|---|---|
| Office and administrative buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Industrial service buildings and depots | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other machinery and equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Flood protection infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pollution abatement and control | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Highway and road structures and networks | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Filters and strainers for fluids and fluid power systems | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Water treatment equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pumps and compressors | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Special-purpose vehicles | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Medium and heavy-duty trucks | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Boilers, metal tanks, industrial valves and seals | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Measuring, control, and scientific instruments | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Televisions and other audio and video equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Computers and peripherals | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office furniture | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other machinery and equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pre-packaged software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Custom-designed software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures |
27. This is a summary of the expenditures reported for storm water management.
Note: You cannot make changes to this page.
Please review the values and, if needed press the Previous button at the bottom of the page to navigate to the previous pages to make any modifications.
| Capital expenditures | |
|---|---|
| Office and administrative buildings | |
| Industrial service buildings and depots | |
| Other machinery and equipment | |
| Flood protection infrastructure | |
| Pollution abatement and control | |
| Highway and road structures and networks | |
| Other infrastructure | |
| Total non-residential construction | |
| Filters and strainers for fluids and fluid power systems | |
| Water treatment equipment | |
| Pumps and compressors | |
| Special-purpose vehicles | |
| Medium and heavy-duty trucks | |
| Boilers, metal tanks, industrial valves and seals | |
| Measuring, control, and scientific instruments | |
| Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment | |
| Televisions and other audio and video equipment | |
| Computers and peripherals | |
| Office furniture | |
| Other machinery and equipment | |
| Total machinery and equipment | |
| Pre-packaged software | |
| Custom-designed software | |
| Total software | |
| Total expenditures |
28. Provide the source of funding breakdown of the capital expenditures previously provided for storm water management.
Note: Sum of a to d should be equal to total capital expenditures reported for storm water management in question 27.
Sources of funding includes government grants, donations, credit and venture capital from external sources according to the level of government (federal, provincial/territorial, and local/regional/municipal). All other sources including internal funding (sales of goods and services, loans, etc.) as well as donations and grants from private sources can be combined under Private and other sources of funding.
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| Municipal or regional government grants and contributions | |
| Provincial and territorial government grants and contributions | |
| Federal government grants and contributions | |
| Private, internal and other sources of funding |
29. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what type of assets received capital expenditures for waste water management?
Include:
Select all that apply.
Waste water management: The administration, supervision, inspection, operation or support of sewage systems and waste water treatment, including activities to support the operation, construction, maintenance or upgrading of such systems.
Includes:
Excludes: rain water or storm water systems (see Storm water management).
Non-residential construction
Industrial service buildings and depots
e.g., maintenance garages, storage facilities
Office and administrative buildings
Other buildings
Specify other buildings
Sewage and wastewater treatment plants
Sewage collection and disposal infrastructure
Flood protection infrastructure
e.g., storm sewers, drains, pipes, dams, reservoirs
Pollution abatement and control
Other infrastructure
Specify other infrastructure
Machinery and equipment
Water treatment equipment
Filters and strainers for fluids and fluid power systems
Boilers, metal tanks, industrial valves and seals
Pumps and compressors
Measuring, control, and scientific instruments
Medium and heavy-duty trucks
Special-purpose vehicles
e.g., trucks for refuse collection
Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment
Televisions and other audio and video equipment
Computers and peripherals
Office furniture
Other machinery and equipment
Specify other machinery and equipment
Software
Pre-packaged software
Custom-designed software
e.g., contract and in-house development
30. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's capital expenditures for waste water management?
Report in thousands of Canadian dollars.
A) New acquisitions and additions: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
B) Acquisitions of used assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately.
C) Refurbishment and renovations: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected useful life (years): Report the expected life of the asset in years.
Affordable Housing: Include rental housing subsidized by the government. Exclude temporary shelters and housing without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Other Residential Construction: Include the housing portion of multi-purpose projects and of townsites, excluding affordable housing. Exclude buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizens residences) and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Non-Residential assets: expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential buildings, engineering construction, machinery, and equipment (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) |
|
|---|---|---|
| Industrial service buildings and depots | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office and administrative buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Sewage and wastewater treatment plants | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Sewage collection and disposal infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Flood protection infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pollution abatement and control | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Water treatment equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Filters and strainers for fluids and fluid power systems | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Boilers, metal tanks, industrial valves and seals | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pumps and compressors | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Measuring, control, and scientific instruments | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Medium and heavy-duty trucks | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Special-purpose vehicles | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Televisions and other audio and video equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Computers and peripherals | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office furniture | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other machinery and equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pre-packaged software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Custom-designed software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures |
31. This is a summary of the expenditures reported for waste water management.
Note: You cannot make changes to this page.
Please review the values and, if needed press the Previous button at the bottom of the page to navigate to the previous pages to make any modifications.
| Capital expenditures | |
|---|---|
| Industrial service buildings and depots | |
| Office and administrative buildings | |
| Other buildings | |
| Sewage and wastewater treatment plants | |
| Sewage collection and disposal infrastructure | |
| Flood protection infrastructure | |
| Pollution abatement and control | |
| Other infrastructure | |
| Total non-residential construction | |
| Water treatment equipment | |
| Filters and strainers for fluids and fluid power systems | |
| Boilers, metal tanks, industrial valves and seals | |
| Pumps and compressors | |
| Measuring, control, and scientific instruments | |
| Medium and heavy-duty trucks | |
| Special-purpose vehicles | |
| Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment | |
| Televisions and other audio and video equipment | |
| Computers and peripherals | |
| Office furniture | |
| Other machinery and equipment | |
| Total machinery and equipment | |
| Pre-packaged software | |
| Custom-designed software | |
| Total software | |
| Total expenditures |
32. Provide the source of funding breakdown of the capital expenditures previously provided for waste water management.
Note: Sum of a to d should be equal to total capital expenditures reported for waste water management in question 31.
Sources of funding include government grants, donations, credit and venture capital from external sources according to the level of government (federal, provincial/territorial, and local/regional/municipal). All other sources including internal funding (sales of goods and services, loans, etc.) as well as donations and grants from private sources can be combined under Private and other sources of funding.
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| Municipal or regional government grants and contributions | |
| Provincial and territorial government grants and contributions | |
| Federal government grants and contributions | |
| Private, internal and other sources of funding |
33. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what type of assets received capital expenditures for waste management?
Include:
Select all that apply.
Waste management: The administration, supervision, inspection, operation or support of waste collection, treatment and disposal systems, including activities to support the operation, construction, maintenance or upgrading of such systems.
Includes:
Non-residential construction
Industrial service buildings and depots
e.g., maintenance garages, storage facilities
Office and administrative buildings
Other buildings
Specify other buildings
Waste disposal facilities
Sewage and wastewater treatment plants
Other sewage infrastructure
Other infrastructure
Specify other infrastructure
Machinery and equipment
Materials handling trucks and tractors
Special-purpose vehicles
e.g., trucks for refuse collection
Medium and heavy-duty trucks
Freight and utility trailers
Other materials handling equipment
Metalworking machinery
Other processing equipment
Heavy-gauge metal containers
e.g., intermodal
Measuring, control, and scientific instruments
Boilers, metal tanks, industrial valves and seals
Televisions and other audio and video equipment
Computers and peripherals
Office furniture
Other machinery and equipment
Specify other machinery and equipment
Software
Pre-packaged software
Custom-designed software
e.g., contract and in-house development
34. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's capital expenditures for waste management?
Report in thousands of Canadian dollars.
A) New acquisitions and additions: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
B) Acquisitions of used assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately.
C) Refurbishment and renovations: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected useful life (years): Report the expected life of the asset in years.
Affordable Housing: Include rental housing subsidized by the government. Exclude temporary shelters and housing without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Other Residential Construction: Include the housing portion of multi-purpose projects and of townsites, excluding affordable housing. Exclude buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizens residences) and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Non-Residential assets: expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential buildings, engineering construction, machinery, and equipment (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) |
|
|---|---|---|
| Industrial service buildings and depots | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office and administrative buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Waste disposal facilities | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Sewage and wastewater treatment plants | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other sewage infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Materials handling trucks and tractors | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Special-purpose vehicles | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Medium and heavy-duty trucks | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Freight and utility trailers | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other materials handling equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Metalworking machinery | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other processing equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Heavy-gauge metal containers | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Measuring, control, and scientific instruments | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Boilers, metal tanks, industrial valves and seals | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Televisions and other audio and video equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Computers and peripherals | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office furniture | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other machinery and equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pre-packaged software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Custom-designed software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures |
35. This is a summary of the expenditures reported for waste management.
Note: You cannot make changes to this page.
Please review the values and, if needed press the Previous button at the bottom of the page to navigate to the previous pages to make any modifications.
| Capital expenditures | |
|---|---|
| Industrial service buildings and depots | |
| Office and administrative buildings | |
| Other buildings | |
| Waste disposal facilities | |
| Sewage and wastewater treatment plants | |
| Other sewage infrastructure | |
| Other infrastructure | |
| Total non-residential construction | |
| Materials handling trucks and tractors | |
| Special-purpose vehicles | |
| Medium and heavy-duty trucks | |
| Freight and utility trailers | |
| Other materials handling equipment | |
| Metalworking machinery | |
| Other processing equipment | |
| Heavy-gauge metal containers | |
| Measuring, control, and scientific instruments | |
| Boilers, metal tanks, industrial valves and seals | |
| Televisions and other audio and video equipment | |
| Computers and peripherals | |
| Office furniture | |
| Other machinery and equipment | |
| Total machinery and equipment | |
| Pre-packaged software | |
| Custom-designed software | |
| Total software | |
| Total expenditures |
36. Provide the source of funding breakdown of the capital expenditures previously provided for waste management.
Note: Sum of a to d should be equal to total capital expenditures reported for waste management in question 35.
Sources of funding include government grants, donations, credit and venture capital from external sources according to the level of government (federal, provincial/territorial, and local/regional/municipal). All other sources including internal funding (sales of goods and services, loans, etc.) as well as donations and grants from private sources can be combined under Private and other sources of funding.
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| Municipal or regional government grants and contributions | |
| Provincial and territorial government grants and contributions | |
| Federal government grants and contributions | |
| Private, internal and other sources of funding |
37. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what type of assets received capital expenditures for other community amenities and environmental protection?
Include:
Select all that apply.
Other community amenities and environmental protection: The administration, management, regulation, supervision, operation and support of activities such as formulation, administration, coordination and monitoring of overall policies, plans, programmes and budgets for the promotion of environmental protection; the preparation and enforcement of legislation and standards for the provision of environmental protection services, and the production and dissemination of general information, technical documentation and statistics on environmental protection.
This group covers activities relating to ambient air and climate protection, soil and groundwater protection, noise and vibration abatement, protection against radiation, protection of fauna and flora species and habitats, and the protection of landscapes for their aesthetic values.
Includes:
Non-residential construction
Office and administrative buildings
Industrial service buildings and depots
e.g., maintenance garages, storage facilities
Other buildings
Specify other buildings
Water filtration and treatment plants
Parking lots and parking garages
e.g., associated electric car charging stations
Waste disposal facilities
Highway and road structures and networks
e.g., signs, guardrails, lighting, landscaping, sidewalks, fences
Site remediation services
e.g., land improvements
Pollution abatement and control infrastructure
Other infrastructure
Specify other infrastructure
Machinery and equipment
Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs
Medium and heavy-duty trucks
Special-purpose vehicles
Non-military ships, barges and platforms
e.g., ferry boats, tug boats
Boats and personal watercraft
Freight and utility trailers
Filters and strainers for fluids and fluid power systems
Measuring, control and scientific instruments
Computers and peripherals
Office furniture
Other machinery and equipment
Specify other machinery and equipment
Software
Pre-packaged software
Custom-designed software
e.g., contract and in-house development
38. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's capital expenditures for other community amenities and environmental protection?
Report in thousands of Canadian dollars.
A) New acquisitions and additions: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
B) Acquisitions of used assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately.
C) Refurbishment and renovations: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected useful life (years): Report the expected life of the asset in years.
Affordable Housing: Include rental housing subsidized by the government. Exclude temporary shelters and housing without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Other Residential Construction: Include the housing portion of multi-purpose projects and of townsites, excluding affordable housing. Exclude buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizens residences) and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Non-Residential assets: expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential buildings, engineering construction, machinery, and equipment (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) |
|
|---|---|---|
| Office and administrative buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Industrial service buildings and depots | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Water filtration and treatment plants | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Parking lots and parking garages | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Waste disposal facilities | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Highway and road structures and networks | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Site remediation services | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pollution abatement and control infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Medium and heavy-duty trucks | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Special-purpose vehicles | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Non-military ships, barges and platforms | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Boats and personal watercraft | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Freight and utility trailers | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Filters and strainers for fluids and fluid power systems | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Measuring, control and scientific instruments | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Computers and peripherals | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office furniture | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other machinery and equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pre-packaged software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Custom-designed software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures |
39. This is a summary of the expenditures reported for other community amenities and environmental protection.
Note: You cannot make changes to this page.
Please review the values and, if needed press the Previous button at the bottom of the page to navigate to the previous pages to make any modifications.
| Capital expenditures | |
|---|---|
| Office and administrative buildings | |
| Industrial service buildings and depots | |
| Other infrastructure | |
| Water filtration plant | |
| Parking lots and parking garage | |
| Waste disposal facilities | |
| Highway and road structures and networks | |
| Site remediation services | |
| Pollution abatement and control infrastructure | |
| Other infrastructure | |
| Total non-residential construction | |
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | |
| Medium and heavy-duty trucks | |
| Special-purpose vehicles | |
| Non-military ships, barges and platforms | |
| Boats and personal watercraft | |
| Freight and utility trailers | |
| Filters and strainers for fluids and fluid power systems | |
| Measuring, control and scientific instruments | |
| Computers and peripherals | |
| Office furniture | |
| Other machinery and equipment | |
| Total machinery and equipment | |
| Pre-packaged software | |
| Custom-designed software | |
| Total software | |
| Total expenditures |
40. Provide the source of funding breakdown of the capital expenditures previously provided for other community amenities and environmental protection.
Note: Sum of a to d should be equal to total capital expenditures reported for other community amenities and environmental protection in question 39.
Sources of funding include government grants, donations, credit and venture capital from external sources according to the level of government (federal, provincial/territorial, and local/regional/municipal). All other sources including internal funding (sales of goods and services, loans, etc.) as well as donations and grants from private sources can be combined under Private and other sources of funding.
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| Municipal or regional government grants and contributions | |
| Provincial and territorial government grants and contributions | |
| Federal government grants and contributions | |
| Private, internal and other sources of funding |
41. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what type of assets received capital expenditures for defense, public order and safety?
Include:
Select all that apply.
Defense, public order and safety: The administration, operation and support of fire prevention and fire-fighting services; of law courts, prisons and other places for the detention or rehabilitation of criminals; military or civil defence affairs and services, and of foreign military aid (monitoring of policies as well as preparation and enforcement of legislation relating to defense). Activities such as formulation, administration, coordination and monitoring of overall policies, plans, programmes and budgets relating to public order and safety are included.
Includes:
Excludes:
Non-residential construction
Public security facilities
e.g., prisons, police stations, fire stations, detention centres, court houses
Industrial service buildings and depots
e.g., maintenance garages, storage facilities, aircraft hangars, aircraft maintenance buildings
Shelters and other collective dwellings
Office and administrative buildings
Schools, colleges, universities and other educational buildings
Industrial laboratories, research and development centres
Warehouses
e.g., refrigerated storage, freight terminal buildings
Clinics and other medical buildings
Other buildings
Specify other buildings
Parking lots and parking garages
e.g., associated electric car charging stations
Runways
e.g., airfields, heliport terminal, tarmac, runway lighting
Highway and road structures, and networks
e.g., signs, guardrails, lighting, landscaping, sidewalks, fences
Flood protection infrastructure
e.g., pipes, dams, reservoirs
Other sewage infrastructure
Water supply infrastructure
Electric power infrastructure
Other infrastructure
Specify other infrastructure
Machinery and equipment
Furniture and fixtures, except office furniture
Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs
Special-purpose vehicles
e.g., fire trucks, prison vans
Freight and utility trailers
Non-military Aircraft
Non-military ships, barges and platforms
Unmanned aerial vehicles
e.g., drones
Boats and personal watercraft
Military aircraft
Military ships
Military armoured vehicles
Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment
Telephone and data communications equipment
e.g., fax machines, telephone switching, local area routers, smartphones
Medical, dental, and personal safety supplies
Automatic weapons, machine guns, rocket launchers, howitzers, mortars, and other weapons
e.g., parts
Computers and peripherals
Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines
Office furniture
Other machinery and equipment
Specify other machinery and equipment
Software
Pre-packaged software
Custom-designed software
e.g., contract and in-house development
42. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's capital expenditures for defense, public order and safety?
Report in thousands of Canadian dollars.
A) New acquisitions and additions: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
B) Acquisitions of used assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately.
C) Refurbishment and renovations: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected useful life (years): Report the expected life of the asset in years.
Affordable Housing: Include rental housing subsidized by the government. Exclude temporary shelters and housing without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Other Residential Construction: Include the housing portion of multi-purpose projects and of townsites, excluding affordable housing. Exclude buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizens residences) and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Non-Residential assets: expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential buildings, engineering construction, machinery, and equipment (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) |
|
|---|---|---|
| Public security facilities | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Industrial service buildings and depots | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Shelters and other collective dwellings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office and administrative buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Schools, colleges, universities and other educational buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Industrial laboratories, research and development centres | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Warehouses | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Clinics and other medical buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Parking lots and parking garages | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Runways | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Highway and road structures and networks | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Flood protection infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other sewage infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Water supply infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Electric power infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Furniture and fixtures, except office furniture | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Special-purpose vehicles | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Freight and utility trailers | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Non-military Aircraft | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Non-military ships, barges and platforms | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Unmanned aerial vehicles | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Boats and personal watercraft | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Military aircraft | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Military ships | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Military armoured vehicles | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Telephone and data communications equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Medical, dental, and personal safety supplies | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Automatic weapons, machine guns, rocket launchers, howitzers, mortars, and other weapons | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Computers and peripherals | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office furniture | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other machinery and equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pre-packaged software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Custom-designed software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures |
43. This is a summary of the capital expenditures reported for defense, public order and safety.
Note: You cannot make changes to this page.
Please review the values and, if needed press the Previous button at the bottom of the page to navigate to the previous pages to make any modifications.
| Capital expenditures | |
|---|---|
| Public security facilities | |
| Industrial service buildings and depots | |
| Shelters and other collective dwellings | |
| Office and administrative buildings | |
| Schools, colleges, universities and other educational buildings | |
| Industrial laboratories, research and development centres | |
| Warehouses | |
| Clinics and other medical buildings | |
| Other buildings | |
| Parking lots and parking garages | |
| Runways | |
| Highway and road structures and networks | |
| Flood protection infrastructure | |
| Other sewage infrastructure | |
| Water supply infrastructure | |
| Electric power infrastructure | |
| Other infrastructure | |
| Total non-residential construction | |
| Furniture and fixtures, except office furniture | |
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | |
| Special-purpose vehicles | |
| Freight and utility trailers | |
| Non-military Aircraft | |
| Non-military ships, barges and platforms | |
| Unmanned aerial vehicles | |
| Boats and personal watercraft | |
| Military aircraft | |
| Military ships | |
| Military armoured vehicles | |
| Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment | |
| Telephone and data communications equipment | |
| Medical, dental, and personal safety supplies | |
| Automatic weapons, machine guns, rocket launchers, howitzers, mortars, and other weapons | |
| Computers and peripherals | |
| Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines | |
| Office furniture | |
| Other machinery and equipment | |
| Total machinery and equipment | |
| Pre-packaged software | |
| Custom-designed software | |
| Total software | |
| Total expenditures |
44. Provide the source of funding breakdown of the capital expenditures previously provided for defense, public order and safety.
Note: Sum of a to d should be equal to total capital expenditures reported for defense, public order and safety in question 43.
Sources of funding include government grants, donations, credit and venture capital from external sources according to the level of government (federal, provincial/territorial, and local/regional/municipal). All other sources including internal funding (sales of goods and services, loans, etc.) as well as donations and grants from private sources can be combined under Private and other sources of funding.
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| Municipal or regional government grants and contributions | |
| Provincial and territorial government grants and contributions | |
| Federal government grants and contributions | |
| Private, internal and other sources of funding |
45. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what type of assets received capital expenditures for hospital services?
Include:
Select all that apply.
Hospital services: This group covers the services of general and specialist hospitals, the services of medical centres, maternity centres, nursing homes and convalescent homes which chiefly provide in-patient services, the services of military base hospitals, the services of institutions serving old people in which medical monitoring is an essential component and the services of rehabilitation centres providing in-patient health care and rehabilitative therapy where the objective is to treat the patient rather than to provide long-term support.
Includes:
Excludes:
Non-residential construction
Hospitals
Clinics and other medical buildings
Nursing home units without exclusive kitchen and bath
Industrial service buildings and depots
e.g., maintenance garages, storage areas
Restaurants and bars
Stores and retail outlets
Office and administrative buildings
Other buildings
Specify other buildings
Parking lots and parking garages
e.g., associated electric car charging stations
Outdoor recreational facilities
Other infrastructure
Specify other infrastructure
Machinery and equipment
Medical and laboratory equipment
e.g., medical furnishings and laboratory apparatus
Other medical, dental, and personal safety supplies
e.g., wheelchairs
Other scientific and technical instruments
Furniture and fixtures, except office furniture
Commercial cooking and food-warming equipment
Commercial and service industry machinery and equipment, (n.e.c.)
e.g., commercial laundry machines
Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs
Special-purpose vehicles
e.g., ambulances
Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment
Boilers, metal tanks, industrial valves and seals
Heating and cooling equipment
Exclude household appliances
Telephone and data communications equipment
e.g., fax machines, telephone switching, local area routers, smartphones
Televisions and other audio and video equipment
Computers and peripherals
Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines
Office furniture
Sporting and athletic goods
e.g., exercise equipment, playground equipment
Other machinery and equipment
Specify other machinery and equipment
Software
Pre-packaged software
Custom-designed software
e.g., contract and in-house development
46. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's capital expenditures for hospital services?
Report in thousands of Canadian dollars.
A) New acquisitions and additions: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
B) Acquisitions of used assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately.
C) Refurbishment and renovations: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected useful life (years): Report the expected life of the asset in years.
Affordable Housing: Include rental housing subsidized by the government. Exclude temporary shelters and housing without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Other Residential Construction: Include the housing portion of multi-purpose projects and of townsites, excluding affordable housing. Exclude buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizens residences) and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Non-Residential assets: expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential buildings, engineering construction, machinery, and equipment (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) |
|
|---|---|---|
| Hospitals | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Clinics and other medical buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Nursing home units without exclusive kitchen and bath | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Industrial service buildings and depots | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Restaurants and bars | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Stores and retail outlets | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office and administrative buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Parking lots and parking garages | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Outdoor recreational facilities | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Medical and laboratory equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other medical, dental, and personal safety supplies | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other scientific and technical instruments | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Furniture and fixtures, except office furniture | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Commercial cooking and food-warming equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Commercial and service industry machinery and equipment, (n.e.c.) | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Special-purpose vehicles | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Boilers, metal tanks, industrial valves and seals | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Heating and cooling equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Telephone and data communications equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Televisions and other audio and video equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Computers and peripherals | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office furniture | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Sporting and athletic goods | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other machinery and equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pre-packaged software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Custom-designed software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures |
47. This is a summary of the capital expenditures reported for hospital services.
Note: You cannot make changes to this page.
Please review the values and, if needed press the Previous button at the bottom of the page to navigate to the previous pages to make any modifications.
| Capital expenditures | |
|---|---|
| Hospitals | |
| Clinics and other medical buildings | |
| Nursing home units without exclusive kitchen and bath | |
| Industrial service buildings and depots | |
| Restaurants and bars | |
| Stores and retail outlets | |
| Office and administrative buildings | |
| Other buildings | |
| Parking lots and parking garages | |
| Outdoor recreational facilities | |
| Other infrastructure | |
| Total non-residential construction | |
| Medical and laboratory equipment | |
| Other medical, dental, and personal safety supplies | |
| Other scientific and technical instruments | |
| Furniture and fixtures, except office furniture | |
| Commercial cooking and food-warming equipment | |
| Commercial and service industry machinery and equipment, (n.e.c.) | |
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | |
| Special-purpose vehicles | |
| Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment | |
| Boilers, metal tanks, industrial valves and seals | |
| Heating and cooling equipment | |
| Telephone and data communications equipment | |
| Televisions and other audio and video equipment | |
| Computers and peripherals | |
| Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines | |
| Office furniture | |
| Sporting and athletic goods | |
| Other machinery and equipment | |
| Total machinery and equipment | |
| Pre-packaged software | |
| Custom-designed software | |
| Total software | |
| Total expenditures |
48. Provide the source of funding breakdown of the capital expenditures previously provided for hospital services.
Note: Sum of a to d should be equal to total capital expenditures reported for hospital services in question 47.
Sources of funding include government grants, donations, credit and venture capital from external sources according to the level of government (federal, provincial/territorial, and local/regional/municipal). All other sources including internal funding (sales of goods and services, loans, etc.) as well as donations and grants from private sources can be combined under Private and other sources of funding.
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| Municipal or regional government grants and contributions | |
| Provincial and territorial government grants and contributions | |
| Federal government grants and contributions | |
| Private, internal and other sources of funding |
49. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what type of assets received capital expenditures for health services?
Include:
Select all that apply
Health services: This group covers medical, dental and paramedical services delivered to outpatients by practitioners and auxiliaries. The services may be delivered at home, in individual or group consulting facilities, dispensaries or the outpatient clinics of hospitals and the like. Outpatient services include the medicaments, prostheses, medical appliances and equipment and other health-related products supplied directly to outpatients by medical, dental and paramedical practitioners and auxiliaries.
The administration, inspection, operation or support of public health services such as blood bank operation (collecting, processing, storing, shipping), disease detection (cancer, tuberculosis, venereal disease), prevention (immunization, inoculation), monitoring (infant nutrition, child health), epidemiological data collection, family planning services, etc. are also included.
Includes:
Exclusions:
Residential buildings
Nursing home units with exclusive kitchen and bathroom
Non-residential construction
Clinics and other medical buildings
Nursing home units without exclusive kitchen and bathroom
Shelters and other collective dwellings
Daycare centres
Industrial laboratories, research and development centres
Stores and retail outlets
Passenger terminal buildings and airports
e.g., heliports
Office and administrative buildings
Other buildings
Specify other buildings
Parking lots and parking garages
e.g., associated electric car charging stations
Other infrastructure
Specify other infrastructure
Machinery and equipment
Medical and laboratory equipment
Exclude scientific instruments.
Other medical, dental, and personal safety supplies
Other scientific and technical instruments
Furniture and fixtures, except office furniture
Commercial cooking and food-warming equipment
Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs
Special-purpose vehicles
e.g., ambulances
Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment
Commercial and service industry machinery and equipment, (n.e.c.)
e.g., commercial laundry machines
Telephone and data communications equipment
e.g., fax machines, telephone switching, local area routers, smartphones
Computers and peripherals
Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines
Office furniture
Other machinery and equipment
Specify other machinery and equipment
Software
Pre-packaged software
Custom-designed software
e.g., contract and in-house development
50. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's capital expenditures for health services?
Report in thousands of Canadian dollars.
A) New acquisitions and additions: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
B) Acquisitions of used assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately.
C) Refurbishment and renovations: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected useful life (years): Report the expected life of the asset in years.
Affordable Housing: Include rental housing subsidized by the government. Exclude temporary shelters and housing without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Other Residential Construction: Include the housing portion of multi-purpose projects and of townsites, excluding affordable housing. Exclude buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizens residences) and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Non-Residential assets: expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential buildings, engineering construction, machinery, and equipment (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) |
|
|---|---|---|
| Nursing home units with exclusive kitchen and bathroom | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Clinics and other medical buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Nursing home units without exclusive kitchen and bath | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Shelters and other collective dwellings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Daycare centres | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Industrial laboratories, research and development centres | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Stores and retail outlets | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Passenger terminal buildings and airports | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office and administrative buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Parking lots and parking garages | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Medical and laboratory equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other medical, dental, and personal safety supplies | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other scientific and technical instruments | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Furniture and fixtures, except office furniture | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Commercial cooking and food-warming equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Special-purpose vehicles | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Commercial and service industry machinery and equipment, (n.e.c.) | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Telephone and data communications equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Computers and peripherals | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office furniture | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other machinery and equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pre-packaged software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Custom-designed software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures |
51. This is a summary of the capital expenditures reported for health services.
Note: You cannot make changes to this page.
Please review the values and, if needed press the Previous button at the bottom of the page to navigate to the previous pages to make any modifications.
| Capital expenditures | |
|---|---|
| Nursing home units with exclusive kitchen and bathroom | |
| Total residential construction | |
| Clinics and other medical buildings | |
| Nursing home units without exclusive kitchen and bath | |
| Shelters and other collective dwellings | |
| Daycare centres | |
| Industrial laboratories, research and development centres | |
| Stores and retail outlets | |
| Passenger terminal buildings and airports | |
| Office and administrative buildings | |
| Other buildings | |
| Parking lots and parking garages | |
| Other infrastructure | |
| Total non-residential construction | |
| Medical and laboratory equipment | |
| Other medical, dental, and personal safety supplies | |
| Other scientific and technical instruments | |
| Furniture and fixtures, except office furniture | |
| Commercial cooking and food-warming equipment | |
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | |
| Special-purpose vehicles | |
| Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment | |
| Commercial and service industry machinery and equipment, (n.e.c.) | |
| Telephone and data communications equipment | |
| Computers and peripherals | |
| Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines | |
| Office furniture | |
| Other machinery and equipment | |
| Total machinery and equipment | |
| Pre-packaged software | |
| Custom-designed software | |
| Total software | |
| Total expenditures |
52. Provide the source of funding breakdown of the capital expenditures previously provided for health services.
Note: Sum of a to d should be equal to total capital expenditures reported for health services in question 51.
Sources of funding include government grants, donations, credit and venture capital from external sources according to the level of government (federal, provincial/territorial, and local/regional/municipal). All other sources including internal funding (sales of goods and services, loans, etc.) as well as donations and grants from private sources can be combined under Private and other sources of funding.
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| Municipal or regional government grants and contributions | |
| Provincial and territorial government grants and contributions | |
| Federal government grants and contributions | |
| Private, internal and other sources of funding |
53. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what type of assets received capital expenditures for housing?
Include:
Select all that apply.
Housing: The provision of social protection in the form of benefits in kind to help households meet the cost of housing (recipients of these benefits are means-tested).
Includes:
Residential buildings
Affordable housing
Senior housing
Other residential buildings
Specify other residential buildings
Non-residential construction
Office and administrative buildings
Industrial service buildings and depots
e.g., maintenance garages, storage areas
Other buildings
Specify other buildings
Parking lots and parking garages
Highway and road structures and networks
e.g., signs, guardrails, lighting, sidewalks, fences
Bridges
e.g., overpasses
Tunnels
Other infrastructure
Specify other infrastructure
Machinery and equipment
Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs
Special-purpose vehicles
e.g., fire trucks, tow trucks, vehicle mounted snow plows
Powered hand tools
Pumps and compressors
Other transportation equipment
e.g., all-terrain vehicles
Medical, dental and personal safety supplies
Telephone and data communications equipment
e.g., fax machines, telephone switching, local area routers, smartphone
Televisions and other audio and video equipment
Construction machinery and equipment
Playground, gymnasium, exercise, and other athletic equipment
Computers and peripherals
Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines
Office furniture
Other machinery and equipment
Specify other machinery and equipment
Software
Pre-packaged software
Custom-designed software
e.g., on contract and in-house development
54. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's capital expenditures for housing?
Report in thousands of Canadian dollars.
A) New acquisitions and additions: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
B) Acquisitions of used assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately.
C) Refurbishment and renovations: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected useful life (years): Report the expected life of the asset in years.
Affordable Housing: Include rental housing subsidized by the government. Exclude temporary shelters and housing without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Other Residential Construction: Include the housing portion of multi-purpose projects and of townsites, excluding affordable housing. Exclude buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizens residences) and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Non-Residential assets: expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential buildings, engineering construction, machinery, and equipment (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) |
|
|---|---|---|
| Affordable housing | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Senior housing | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other residential buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office and administrative buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Industrial service buildings and depots | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Parking lots and parking garages | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Highway and road structures and networks | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Bridges | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Tunnels | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Special-purpose vehicles | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Powered hand tools | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pumps and compressors | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other transportation equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Medical, dental and personal safety supplies | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Telephone and data communications equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Televisions and other audio and video equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Construction machinery and equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Playground, gymnasium, exercise, and other athletic equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Computers and peripherals | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office furniture | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other machinery and equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pre-packaged software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Custom-designed software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures |
55. This is a summary of the capital expenditures reported for housing.
Note: You cannot make changes to this page.
Please review the values and, if needed press the Previous button at the bottom of the page to navigate to the previous pages to make any modifications.
| Capital expenditures | |
|---|---|
| Affordable housing | |
| Senior housing | |
| Other residential buildings | |
| Total residential construction | |
| Office and administrative buildings | |
| Industrial service buildings and depots | |
| Other buildings | |
| Parking lots and parking garages | |
| Highway and road structures and networks | |
| Bridges | |
| Tunnels | |
| Other infrastructure | |
| Total non-residential construction | |
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | |
| Special-purpose vehicles | |
| Powered hand tools | |
| Pumps and compressors | |
| Other transportation equipment | |
| Medical, dental and personal safety supplies | |
| Telephone and data communications equipment | |
| Televisions and other audio and video equipment | |
| Construction machinery and equipment | |
| Playground, gymnasium, exercise, and other athletic equipment | |
| Computers and peripherals | |
| Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines | |
| Office furniture | |
| Other machinery and equipment | |
| Total machinery and equipment | |
| Pre-packaged software | |
| Custom-designed software | |
| Total software | |
| Total expenditures |
56. Provide the source of funding breakdown of the capital expenditures previously provided for housing.
Note: Sum of a to d should be equal to total capital expenditures reported for housing in question 55.
Sources of funding include government grants, donations, credit and venture capital from external sources according to the level of government (federal, provincial/territorial, and local/regional/municipal). All other sources including internal funding (sales of goods and services, loans, etc.) as well as donations and grants from private sources can be combined under Private and other sources of funding.
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| Municipal or regional government grants and contributions | |
| Provincial and territorial government grants and contributions | |
| Federal government grants and contributions | |
| Private, internal and other sources of funding |
57. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what type of assets received capital expenditures for other health and social protection?
Include:
Select all that apply.
Other health and social protection: The provision of social protection in the form of cash benefits or benefits in kind to persons who are unable to find suitable employment or who are unable to engage in economic activity or lead a normal life due to a physical or mental impairment (permanent or likely to persist beyond a minimum prescribed period); to protect against the risks linked to old age (loss of income, inadequate income, lack of independence in carrying out daily tasks, reduced participation in social and community life, etc.); to support persons who are survivors of a deceased person spouse or relative or who are victims of crime; and to support households with dependent children.
Includes:
Excludes:
Residential buildings
Other residential buildings
Non-residential construction
Office and administrative buildings
Daycare centres
Shelters and other collective dwellings
Industrial service buildings and depots
e.g., maintenance garages, storage areas
Other buildings
Specify other buildings
Parking lots and parking garages
Other infrastructure
Specify other infrastructure
Machinery and equipment
Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs
Furniture and fixtures
Exclude office furniture.
Computers
Office furniture
Other machinery and equipment
Specify other machinery and equipment
Software
Pre-packaged software
Custom-designed software
e.g., on contract and in-house development
58. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's capital expenditures for other health and social protection?
Report in thousands of Canadian dollars.
A) New acquisitions and additions: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
B) Acquisitions of used assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately.
C) Refurbishment and renovations: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected useful life (years): Report the expected life of the asset in years.
Affordable Housing: Include rental housing subsidized by the government. Exclude temporary shelters and housing without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Other Residential Construction: Include the housing portion of multi-purpose projects and of townsites, excluding affordable housing. Exclude buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizens residences) and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Non-Residential assets: expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential buildings, engineering construction, machinery, and equipment (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) |
|
|---|---|---|
| Other residential buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office and administrative buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Daycare centres | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Shelters and other collective dwellings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Industrial service buildings and depots | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Parking lots and parking garages | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Furniture and fixtures | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Computers | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office furniture | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other machinery and equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pre-packaged software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Custom-designed software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures |
59. This is a summary of the capital expenditures reported for other health and social protection.
Note: You cannot make changes to this page.
Please review the values and, if needed press the Previous button at the bottom of the page to navigate to the previous pages to make any modifications.
| Capital expenditures | |
|---|---|
| Other residential buildings | |
| Total residential construction | |
| Office and administrative buildings | |
| Daycare centres | |
| Shelters and other collective dwellings | |
| Industrial service buildings and depots | |
| Other buildings | |
| Parking lots and parking garages | |
| Other infrastructure | |
| Total non-residential construction | |
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | |
| Furniture and fixtures | |
| Computers | |
| Office furniture | |
| Other machinery and equipment | |
| Total machinery and equipment | |
| Pre-packaged software | |
| Custom-designed software | |
| Total software | |
| Total expenditures |
60. Provide the source of funding breakdown of the capital expenditures previously provided for other health and social protection.
Note: Sum of a to d should be equal to total capital expenditures reported for other health and social protection in question 59.
Sources of funding include government grants, donations, credit and venture capital from external sources according to the level of government (federal, provincial/territorial, and local/regional/municipal). All other sources including internal funding (sales of goods and services, loans, etc.) as well as donations and grants from private sources can be combined under Private and other sources of funding.
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| Municipal or regional government grants and contributions | |
| Provincial and territorial government grants and contributions | |
| Federal government grants and contributions | |
| Private, internal and other sources of funding |
61. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what type of assets received capital expenditures for education?
Include:
Select all that apply.
Education: The provision of education and the administration, inspection, operation or support of schools and other institutions providing educational services. The provision of subsidiary services to education and the administration, inspection, operation or support of transportation, food, lodging, medical and dental care and related subsidiary services chiefly for students regardless of level.
Includes:
Excludes: school health monitoring and prevention services (see Health services).
Residential buildings
Student residence units with exclusive kitchen and bathroom
Non-residential construction
Schools, colleges, universities and other educational buildings
Student residence units without exclusive kitchen and bathroom
Industrial laboratories, research and development centres
Libraries
Sports facilities with spectator capacity
Other indoor recreational facilities
Restaurants and bars
Daycare centres
Industrial service buildings and depots
e.g., maintenance garages, storage areas
Office and administrative buildings
Other buildings
Specify other buildings
Parking lots and parking garages
Outdoor recreational facilities
Highway and road structures and networks
e.g., signs, guardrails, lighting, sidewalks, fences
Other infrastructure
Specify other infrastructure
Machinery and equipment
Medical and medical laboratory equipment
Exclude scientific instruments.
Measuring, control and scientific equipment
Other scientific and technical instruments
Furniture and fixtures
Exclude office furniture.
Buses
Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs
Medium and heavy-duty trucks
Special-purpose vehicles
Boats and personal watercraft
Aircraft
Other transportation equipment
e.g., all-terrain vehicles
Navigational and guidance instruments
e.g., ultrasonic detecting equipment, radio navigational aid, radio direction finders
Agricultural, lawn and garden machinery and equipment
Construction machinery and equipment
Metalworking machinery
Powered hand tools
Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment
Commercial cooking and food-warming equipment
Commercial and service equipment (n.e.c.)
Televisions and other audio and video equipment
Telephone and data communications equipment
Playground, gymnasium, exercise, and other athletic equipment
Heating and cooling equipment
Exclude household appliances.
Boilers, metal tanks, industrial valves and seals
Pumps and compressors
Computers and peripherals
Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines
Office furniture
Other machinery and equipment
Specify other machinery and equipment
Software
Pre-packaged software
Custom-designed software
e.g., on contract and in-house development
62. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's capital expenditures for education?
Report in thousands of Canadian dollars.
A) New acquisitions and additions: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
B) Acquisitions of used assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately.
C) Refurbishment and renovations: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected useful life (years): Report the expected life of the asset in years.
Affordable Housing: Include rental housing subsidized by the government. Exclude temporary shelters and housing without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Other Residential Construction: Include the housing portion of multi-purpose projects and of townsites, excluding affordable housing. Exclude buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizens residences) and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Non-Residential assets: expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential buildings, engineering construction, machinery, and equipment (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) |
|
|---|---|---|
| Student residence units with exclusive kitchen and bathroom | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Schools, colleges, universities and other educational buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Student residence units without exclusive kitchen and bathroom | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Industrial laboratories, research and development centres | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Libraries | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Sports facilities with spectator capacity | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other indoor recreational facilities | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Restaurants and bars | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Daycare centres | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Industrial service buildings and depots | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office and administrative buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Parking lots and parking garages | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Outdoor recreational facilities | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Highway and road structures and networks | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Medical and medical laboratory equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Measuring, control and scientific equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other scientific and technical instruments | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Furniture and fixtures | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Buses | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Medium and heavy-duty trucks | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Special-purpose vehicles | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Boats and personal watercraft | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Aircraft | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other transportation equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Navigational and guidance instruments | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Agricultural, lawn and garden machinery and equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Construction machinery and equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Metalworking machinery | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Powered hand tools | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Commercial cooking and food-warming equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Commercial and service equipment (n.e.c.) | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Televisions and other audio and video equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Telephone and data communications equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Playground, gymnasium, exercise, and other athletic equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Heating and cooling equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Boilers, metal tanks, industrial valves and seals | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pumps and compressors | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Computers and peripherals | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office furniture | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other machinery and equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pre-packaged software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Custom-designed software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures |
63. This is a summary of the capital expenditures reported for education.
Note: You cannot make changes to this page.
Please review the values and, if needed press the Previous button at the bottom of the page to navigate to the previous pages to make any modifications.
| Capital expenditures | |
|---|---|
| Student residence units with exclusive kitchen and bathroom | |
| Total residential construction | |
| Schools, colleges, universities and other educational buildings | |
| Student residence units without exclusive kitchen and bathroom | |
| Industrial laboratories, research and development centres | |
| Libraries | |
| Sports facilities with spectator capacity | |
| Other indoor recreational facilities | |
| Restaurants and bars | |
| Daycare centres | |
| Industrial service buildings and depots | |
| Office and administrative buildings | |
| Other buildings | |
| Parking lots and parking garages | |
| Outdoor recreational facilities | |
| Highway and road structures and networks | |
| Other infrastructure | |
| Total non-residential construction | |
| Medical and medical laboratory equipment | |
| Measuring, control and scientific equipment | |
| Other scientific and technical instruments | |
| Furniture and fixtures | |
| Buses | |
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | |
| Medium and heavy-duty trucks | |
| Special-purpose vehicles | |
| Boats and personal watercraft | |
| Aircraft | |
| Other transportation equipment | |
| Navigational and guidance instruments | |
| Agricultural, lawn and garden machinery and equipment | |
| Construction machinery and equipment | |
| Metalworking machinery | |
| Powered hand tools | |
| Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment | |
| Commercial cooking and food-warming equipment | |
| Commercial and service equipment (n.e.c.) | |
| Televisions and other audio and video equipment | |
| Telephone and data communications equipment | |
| Playground, gymnasium, exercise, and other athletic equipment | |
| Heating and cooling equipment | |
| Boilers, metal tanks, industrial valves and seals | |
| Pumps and compressors | |
| Computers and peripherals | |
| Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines | |
| Office furniture | |
| Other machinery and equipment | |
| Total machinery and equipment | |
| Pre-packaged software | |
| Custom-designed software | |
| Total software | |
| Total expenditures |
64. Provide the source of funding breakdown of the capital expenditures previously provided for education.
Note: Sum of a to d should be equal to total capital expenditures reported for education in question 63.
Sources of funding include government grants, donations, credit and venture capital from external sources according to the level of government (federal, provincial/territorial, and local/regional/municipal). All other sources including internal funding (sales of goods and services, loans, etc.) as well as donations and grants from private sources can be combined under Private and other sources of funding.
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| Municipal or regional government grants and contributions | |
| Provincial and territorial government grants and contributions | |
| Federal government grants and contributions | |
| Private, internal and other sources of funding |
65. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what type of assets received capital expenditures for recreation, culture and religion?
Include:
Select all that apply.
Recreation, culture and religion: The provision of sporting, recreational, and cultural services and the operation or support of broadcasting and publishing services; administration of sporting, recreational, cultural, religious, broadcasting and publishing affairs; supervision and regulation of sporting, recreation and cultural facilities, and of broadcasting and publishing services; activities to support teams or individual competitors or players, individual artists, writers, designers, composers and others working in the arts, or to organizations engaged in promoting cultural activities.
Includes:
Excludes:
Non-residential construction
Sports facilities with spectator capacity
Other Indoor recreational facilities
Libraries
Religious centres and memorial sites
Museums
Theatres and halls
e.g., concert halls, exhibition halls, movie theatres
Historical sites
Restaurants and bars
Marinas
Industrial service buildings and depots
Office and administrative buildings
Other institutional buildings
e.g., park buildings
Other buildings
Specify other buildings
Outdoor recreational facilities
Parking lots and parking garages
Other infrastructure
Specify other infrastructure
Machinery and equipment
Furniture and fixtures
Exclude office furniture.
Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs
Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment
Telephone and data communications equipment
Commercial cooking and food-warming equipment
Commercial and service industry machinery (n.e.c.)
Playground, gymnasium, exercise, and other athletic equipment
Computers
Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines
Office furniture
Other machinery and equipment
Specify other machinery and equipment
Software
Pre-packaged software
Custom-designed software
e.g., on contract and in-house development
66. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's capital expenditures for recreation, culture and religion?
Report in thousands of Canadian dollars.
A) New acquisitions and additions: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
B) Acquisitions of used assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately.
C) Refurbishment and renovations: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected useful life (years): Report the expected life of the asset in years.
Affordable Housing: Include rental housing subsidized by the government. Exclude temporary shelters and housing without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Other Residential Construction: Include the housing portion of multi-purpose projects and of townsites, excluding affordable housing. Exclude buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizens residences) and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Non-Residential assets: expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential buildings, engineering construction, machinery, and equipment (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) |
|
|---|---|---|
| Sports facilities with spectator capacity | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other Indoor recreational facilities | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Libraries | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Religious centres and memorial sites | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Museums | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Theatres and halls | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Historical sites | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Restaurants and bars | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Marinas | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Industrial service buildings and depots | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office and administrative buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other institutional buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Outdoor recreational facilities | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Parking lots and parking garages | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Furniture and fixtures | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Telephone and data communications equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Commercial cooking and food-warming equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Commercial and service industry machinery (n.e.c.) | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Playground, gymnasium, exercise, and other athletic equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Computers | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office furniture | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other machinery and equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pre-packaged software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Custom-designed software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures |
67. This is a summary of the capital expenditures reported for recreation, culture and religion.
Note: You cannot make changes to this page.
Please review the values and, if needed press the Previous button at the bottom of the page to navigate to the previous pages to make any modifications.
| Capital expenditures | |
|---|---|
| Sports facilities with spectator capacity | |
| Other Indoor recreational facilities | |
| Libraries | |
| Religious centres and memorial sites | |
| Museums | |
| Theatres and halls | |
| Historical sites | |
| Restaurants and bars | |
| Marinas | |
| Industrial service buildings and depots | |
| Office and administrative buildings | |
| Other institutional buildings | |
| Other buildings | |
| Outdoor recreational facilities | |
| Parking lots and parking garages | |
| Other infrastructure | |
| Total non-residential construction | |
| Furniture and fixtures | |
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | |
| Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment | |
| Telephone and data communications equipment | |
| Commercial cooking and food-warming equipment | |
| Commercial and service industry machinery (n.e.c.) | |
| Playground, gymnasium, exercise, and other athletic equipment | |
| Computers | |
| Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines | |
| Office furniture | |
| Other machinery and equipment | |
| Total machinery and equipment | |
| Pre-packaged software | |
| Custom-designed software | |
| Total software | |
| Total expenditures |
68. Provide the source of funding breakdown of the capital expenditures previously provided for recreation, culture and religion.
Note: Sum of a to d should be equal to total capital expenditures reported for recreation, culture and religion in question 67.
Sources of funding include government grants, donations, credit and venture capital from external sources according to the level of government (federal, provincial/territorial, and local/regional/municipal). All other sources including internal funding (sales of goods and services, loans, etc.) as well as donations and grants from private sources can be combined under Private and other sources of funding.
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| Municipal or regional government grants and contributions | |
| Provincial and territorial government grants and contributions | |
| Federal government grants and contributions | |
| Private, internal and other sources of funding |
69. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what type of assets received capital expenditures for electricity.
Include:
Select all that apply.
Electricity: The administration, conservation, development, supervision and regulation of the generation, transmission and distribution of electricity. This class covers both traditional sources of electricity (such as thermal or hydro supplies) and newer sources (such as wind or solar heat).
Non-residential construction
Office and administrative buildings
Industrial service buildings and depots
e.g., maintenance garages, storage areas
Industrial laboratories, research and development centres
Other buildings
Specify other buildings
Power transmission networks
Power distribution networks
Hydro-power plants
Wind and solar power plants
Fossil fuel/steam power plants
Nuclear power plants
Other electric power infrastructure
Highway and road structures and networks
e.g., signs, guardrails, lighting, landscaping, sidewalks, fences
Pollution abatement and control infrastructure
Other infrastructure
Specify other infrastructure
Machinery and equipment
Power and distribution transformers
Turbines, turbine generators, and turbine generator sets
Instruments for measuring electricity
Nuclear reactor steam supply system equipment
Switchgear, switchboards, relays, and industrial control apparatus
Boilers, metal tanks, industrial valves and seals
Other scientific and technical instruments
Engines and mechanical power transmission equipment
Electric motors and generators
Telephone and data communications equipment
Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment
Construction machinery and equipment
Medium and heavy-duty trucks
Freight and utility trailers
Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs
Computers and peripherals
Office furniture
Other machinery and equipment
Specify other machinery and equipment
Software
Pre-packaged software
Custom-designed software
e.g., on contract and in-house development
70. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's capital expenditures for electricity?
Report in thousands of Canadian dollars.
A) New acquisitions and additions: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
B) Acquisitions of used assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately.
C) Refurbishment and renovations: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected useful life (years): Report the expected life of the asset in years.
Affordable Housing: Include rental housing subsidized by the government. Exclude temporary shelters and housing without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Other Residential Construction: Include the housing portion of multi-purpose projects and of townsites, excluding affordable housing. Exclude buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizens residences) and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Non-Residential assets: expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential buildings, engineering construction, machinery, and equipment (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) |
|
|---|---|---|
| Office and administrative buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Industrial service buildings and depots | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Industrial laboratories, research and development centres | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Power transmission networks | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Power distribution networks | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Hydro-power plants | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Wind and solar power plants | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Fossil fuel/steam power plants | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Nuclear power plants | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other electric power infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Highway and road structures and networks | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pollution abatement and control infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Power and distribution transformers | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Turbines, turbine generators, and turbine generator sets | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Instruments for measuring electricity | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Nuclear reactor steam supply system equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Switchgear, switchboards, relays, and industrial control apparatus | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Boilers, metal tanks, industrial valves and seals | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other scientific and technical instruments | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Engines and mechanical power transmission equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Electric motors and generators | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Telephone and data communications equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Construction machinery and equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Medium and heavy-duty trucks | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Freight and utility trailers | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Computers and peripherals | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office furniture | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other machinery and equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pre-packaged software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Custom-designed software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures |
71. This is a summary of the capital expenditures reported for electricity.
Note: You cannot make changes to this page.
Please review the values and, if needed press the Previous button at the bottom of the page to navigate to the previous pages to make any modifications.
| Capital expenditures | |
|---|---|
| Office and administrative buildings | |
| Industrial service buildings and depots | |
| Industrial laboratories, research and development centres | |
| Other buildings | |
| Power transmission networks | |
| Power distribution networks | |
| Hydro-power plants | |
| Wind and solar power plants | |
| Fossil fuel/steam power plants | |
| Nuclear power plants | |
| Other electric power infrastructure | |
| Highway and road structures and networks | |
| Pollution abatement and control infrastructure | |
| Other infrastructure | |
| Total non-residential construction | |
| Power and distribution transformers | |
| Turbines, turbine generators, and turbine generator sets | |
| Instruments for measuring electricity | |
| Nuclear reactor steam supply system equipment | |
| Switchgear, switchboards, relays, and industrial control apparatus | |
| Boilers, metal tanks, industrial valves and seals | |
| Other scientific and technical instruments | |
| Engines and mechanical power transmission equipment | |
| Electric motors and generators | |
| Telephone and data communications equipment | |
| Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment | |
| Construction machinery and equipment | |
| Medium and heavy-duty trucks | |
| Freight and utility trailers | |
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | |
| Computers and peripherals | |
| Office furniture | |
| Other machinery and equipment | |
| Total machinery and equipment | |
| Pre-packaged software | |
| Custom-designed | |
| Total software | |
| Total expenditures |
72. Provide the source of funding breakdown of the capital expenditures previously provided for electricity.
Note: Sum of a to d should be equal to total capital expenditures reported for electricity in question 71.
Sources of funding include government grants, donations, credit and venture capital from external sources according to the level of government (federal, provincial/territorial, and local/regional/municipal). All other sources including internal funding (sales of goods and services, loans, etc.) as well as donations and grants from private sources can be combined under Private and other sources of funding.
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| Municipal or regional government grants and contributions | |
| Provincial and territorial government grants and contributions | |
| Federal government grants and contributions | |
| Private, internal and other sources of funding |
73. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what type of assets received capital expenditures for fuel and energy.
Include:
Select all that apply.
Fuel and energy: The administration of fuel and energy affairs and services, except electricity, including supervision, regulation, conservation, discovery, development and rationalized exploitation of the resources (extraction, processing, distribution and use).
Includes:
Non-residential construction
Office and administrative buildings
Warehouses
e.g., refrigerated storage, freight terminal buildings
Industrial service buildings and depots
e.g., maintenance garages, storage areas
Other buildings
Specify other buildings
Production facilities in oil and gas extraction
Natural gas processing plants
Pipelines
Other oil and gas infrastructure
e.g., gas mains, bulk storage, pumping sites, oil or gas storage tanks, injection wells, seismograph stations
Development drilling
Waste disposal facilities
e.g., underground caverns
Electric power infrastructure
Highway and road structures and networks
e.g., signs, guardrails, lighting, landscaping, sidewalks, fences
Other transportation infrastructure
e.g., loading facilities, freight terminal structures
Parking lots and parking garages
Other infrastructure
Specify other infrastructure
Machinery and equipment
Measuring, control and scientific instruments
e.g., laboratory equipment
Pumps and compressors
Electric motors and generators
Heating and cooling equipment
Exclude household appliances.
Oil and gas field production machinery and equipment
Computers and peripherals
Office furniture
Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment
Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs
Medium and heavy-duty trucks
Other machinery and equipment
Specify other machinery and equipment
Software
Pre-packaged software
Custom-designed software
e.g., on contract and in-house development
74. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's capital expenditures for fuel and energy?
Report in thousands of Canadian dollars.
A) New acquisitions and additions: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
B) Acquisitions of used assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately.
C) Refurbishment and renovations: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected useful life (years): Report the expected life of the asset in years.
Affordable Housing: Include rental housing subsidized by the government. Exclude temporary shelters and housing without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Other Residential Construction: Include the housing portion of multi-purpose projects and of townsites, excluding affordable housing. Exclude buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizens residences) and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Non-Residential assets: expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential buildings, engineering construction, machinery, and equipment (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) |
|
|---|---|---|
| Office and administrative buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Warehouses | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Industrial service buildings and depots | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Production facilities in oil and gas extraction | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Natural gas processing plants | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pipelines | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other oil and gas infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Development drilling | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Waste disposal facilities | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Electric power infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Highway and road structures and networks | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other transportation infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Parking lots and parking garages | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Measuring, control and scientific instruments | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pumps and compressors | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Electric motors and generators | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Heating and cooling equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Oil and gas field production machinery and equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Computers and peripherals | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office furniture | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Medium and heavy-duty trucks | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other machinery and equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pre-packaged software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Custom-designed software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures |
75. This is a summary of the capital expenditures reported for fuel and energy.
Note: You cannot make changes to this page.
Please review the values and, if needed press the Previous button at the bottom of the page to navigate to the previous pages to make any modifications.
| Capital expenditures | |
|---|---|
| Office and administrative buildings | |
| Warehouses | |
| Industrial service buildings and depots | |
| Other buildings | |
| Production facilities in oil and gas extraction | |
| Natural gas processing plants | |
| Pipelines | |
| Other oil and gas infrastructure | |
| Development drilling | |
| Waste disposal facilities | |
| Electric power infrastructure | |
| Highway and road structures and networks | |
| Other transportation infrastructure | |
| Parking lots and parking garages | |
| Other infrastructure | |
| Total non-residential construction | |
| Measuring, control and scientific instruments | |
| Pumps and compressors | |
| Electric motors and generators | |
| Heating and cooling equipment | |
| Oil and gas field production machinery and equipment | |
| Computers and peripherals | |
| Office furniture | |
| Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment | |
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | |
| Medium and heavy-duty trucks | |
| Other machinery and equipment | |
| Total machinery and equipment | |
| Pre-packaged software | |
| Custom-designed software | |
| Total software | |
| Total expenditures |
76. Provide the source of funding breakdown of the capital expenditures previously provided for fuel and energy.
Note: Sum of a to d should be equal to total capital expenditures reported for fuel and energy in question 75.
Sources of funding include government grants, donations, credit and venture capital from external sources according to the level of government (federal, provincial/territorial, and local/regional/municipal). All other sources including internal funding (sales of goods and services, loans, etc.) as well as donations and grants from private sources can be combined under Private and other sources of funding.
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| Municipal or regional government grants and contributions | |
| Provincial and territorial government grants and contributions | |
| Federal government grants and contributions | |
| Private, internal and other sources of funding |
77. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what type of assets received capital expenditures for tourism?
Include:
Select all that apply.
Tourism: The administration of tourism affairs and services.
Includes:
Non-residential construction
Office and administrative buildings
Historical sites
Museums
Industrial service buildings and depots
e.g., maintenance garages, storage areas
Other buildings
Specify other buildings
Parking lots and parking garages
Highway and road structures and networks
e.g., signs, guardrails, lighting, landscaping, sidewalks, fences
Other infrastructure
Specify other infrastructure
Machinery and equipment
Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs
Buses
e.g., vans of a seating capacity of 10 persons or more, electric trackless trolley coaches
Other boats and personal watercraft
Computers and peripherals
Office furniture
Furniture and fixtures
Exclude office furniture.
Other machinery and equipment
Specify other machinery and equipment
Software
Pre-packaged software
Custom-designed software
e.g., on contract and in-house development
78. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's capital expenditures for tourism?
Report in thousands of Canadian dollars.
A) New acquisitions and additions: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
B) Acquisitions of used assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately.
C) Refurbishment and renovations: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected useful life (years): Report the expected life of the asset in years.
Affordable Housing: Include rental housing subsidized by the government. Exclude temporary shelters and housing without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Other Residential Construction: Include the housing portion of multi-purpose projects and of townsites, excluding affordable housing. Exclude buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizens residences) and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Non-Residential assets: expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential buildings, engineering construction, machinery, and equipment (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) |
|
|---|---|---|
| Office and administrative buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Historical sites | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Museums | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Industrial service buildings and depots | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Parking lots and parking garages | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Highway and road structures and networks | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Buses | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other boats and personal watercraft | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Computers and peripherals | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office furniture | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Furniture and fixtures | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other machinery and equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pre-packaged software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Custom-designed software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures |
79. This is a summary of the capital expenditures reported for tourism.
Note: You cannot make changes to this page.
Please review the values and, if needed press the Previous button at the bottom of the page to navigate to the previous pages to make any modifications.
| Capital expenditures | |
|---|---|
| Office and administrative buildings | |
| Historical sites | |
| Museums | |
| Industrial service buildings and depots | |
| Other buildings | |
| Parking lots and parking garages | |
| Highway and road structures and networks | |
| Other infrastructure | |
| Total non-residential construction | |
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | |
| Buses | |
| Other boats and personal watercraft | |
| Computers and peripherals | |
| Office furniture | |
| Furniture and fixtures | |
| Other machinery and equipment | |
| Total machinery and equipment | |
| Pre-packaged software | |
| Custom-designed software | |
| Total software | |
| Total expenditures |
80. Provide the source of funding breakdown of the capital expenditures previously provided for tourism.
Note: Sum of a to d should be equal to total capital expenditures reported for tourism in question 79.
Sources of funding include government grants, donations, credit and venture capital from external sources according to the level of government (federal, provincial/territorial, and local/regional/municipal). All other sources including internal funding (sales of goods and services, loans, etc.) as well as donations and grants from private sources can be combined under Private and other sources of funding.
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| Municipal or regional government grants and contributions | |
| Provincial and territorial government grants and contributions | |
| Federal government grants and contributions | |
| Private, internal and other sources of funding |
81. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what type of assets received capital expenditures for general economic, commercial, and labour affairs?
Include:
Select all that apply
General economic, commercial, and labour affairs: The administration of general economic, commercial and labour affairs and services, including general foreign commercial affairs; formulation and implementation of general economic, commercial and labour policies; liaison among different branches of government and between government and overall industrial, business and labour organizations.
Includes:
Non-residential construction
Office and administrative buildings
e.g., bank buildings
Industrial service buildings and depots
e.g., maintenance garages, storage areas
Other institutional buildings
e.g., meteorological stations
Other buildings
Specify other buildings
Parking lots and parking garages
Other infrastructure
Specify other infrastructure
Machinery and equipment
Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs
Aircraft
Other transportation equipment
Measuring, control, and scientific instruments
Computers and peripherals
Office furniture
Other machinery and equipment
Specify other machinery and equipment
Software
Pre-packaged software
Custom-designed software
e.g., on contract and in-house development
82. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's capital expenditures for general economic, commercial, and labour affairs?
Report in thousands of Canadian dollars.
A) New acquisitions and additions: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
B) Acquisitions of used assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately.
C) Refurbishment and renovations: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected useful life (years): Report the expected life of the asset in years.
Affordable Housing: Include rental housing subsidized by the government. Exclude temporary shelters and housing without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Other Residential Construction: Include the housing portion of multi-purpose projects and of townsites, excluding affordable housing. Exclude buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizens residences) and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Non-Residential assets: expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential buildings, engineering construction, machinery, and equipment (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) |
|
|---|---|---|
| Office and administrative buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Industrial service buildings and depots | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other institutional buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Parking lots and parking garages | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Aircraft | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other transportation equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Measuring, control, and scientific instruments | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Computers and peripherals | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office furniture | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other machinery and equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pre-packaged software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Custom-designed software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures |
83. This is a summary of the capital expenditures reported for general economic, commercial, and labour affairs.
Note: You cannot make changes to this page.
Please review the values and, if needed press the Previous button at the bottom of the page to navigate to the previous pages to make any modifications.
| Capital expenditures | |
|---|---|
| Office and administrative buildings | |
| Industrial service buildings and depots | |
| Other institutional buildings | |
| Other buildings | |
| Parking lots and parking garages | |
| Other infrastructure | |
| Total non-residential construction | |
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | |
| Aircraft | |
| Other transportation equipment | |
| Measuring, control, and scientific instruments | |
| Computers and peripherals | |
| Office furniture | |
| Other machinery and equipment | |
| Total machinery and equipment | |
| Pre-packaged software | |
| Custom-designed software | |
| Total software | |
| Total expenditures |
84. Provide the source of funding breakdown of the capital expenditures previously provided for general economic, commercial, and labour affairs.
Note: Sum of a to d should be equal to total capital expenditures reported for general economic, commercial, and labour affairs in question 83.
Sources of funding include government grants, donations, credit and venture capital from external sources according to the level of government (federal, provincial/territorial, and local/regional/municipal). All other sources including internal funding (sales of goods and services, loans, etc.) as well as donations and grants from private sources can be combined under Private and other sources of funding.
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| Municipal or regional government grants and contributions | |
| Provincial and territorial government grants and contributions | |
| Federal government grants and contributions | |
| Private, internal and other sources of funding |
85. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what type of assets received capital expenditures for agriculture, forestry, fishing, hunting, mining, manufacturing, and construction?
Include:
Select all that apply.
Agriculture, forestry, fishing, hunting, mining, manufacturing, and construction: The administration, operation, supervision and regulation of agricultural, forestry, fishing, hunting, mining, manufacturing, and construction industry affairs and services.
Includes:
Excludes:
Non-residential construction
Office and administrative buildings
Farm buildings
Manufacturing plants
Industrial service buildings and depots
e.g., maintenance garages, storage areas
Industrial laboratories, research and development centres
Warehouses
Other buildings
Specify other buildings
Parking lots and parking garages
Highway and road structures and networks
e.g., signs, guardrails, lighting, landscaping, sidewalks, fences
Irrigation networks
Other infrastructure
Specify other infrastructure
Machinery and equipment
Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs
Special-purpose vehicles
e.g., fire trucks, prison vans
Aircraft
Medium and heavy-duty trucks
Agricultural, lawn and garden machinery and equipment
Heating and cooling equipment
Exclude household appliances.
Industry-specific manufacturing equipment
Materials handling equipment
Measuring, control and scientific instruments
Other scientific and technical instruments
Computers and peripherals
Office furniture
Other machinery and equipment
Specify other machinery and equipment
Software
Pre-packaged software
Custom-designed software
e.g., on contract and in-house development
86. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's capital expenditures for agriculture, forestry, fishing, hunting, mining, manufacturing, and construction?
Report in thousands of Canadian dollars.
A) New acquisitions and additions: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
B) Acquisitions of used assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately.
C) Refurbishment and renovations: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected useful life (years): Report the expected life of the asset in years.
Affordable Housing: Include rental housing subsidized by the government. Exclude temporary shelters and housing without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Other Residential Construction: Include the housing portion of multi-purpose projects and of townsites, excluding affordable housing. Exclude buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizens residences) and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Non-Residential assets: expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential buildings, engineering construction, machinery, and equipment (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) |
|
|---|---|---|
| Office and administrative buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Farm buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Manufacturing plants | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Industrial service buildings and depots | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Industrial laboratories, research and development centres | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Warehouses | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Parking lots and parking garages | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Highway and road structures and networks | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Irrigation networks | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Special-purpose vehicles | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Aircraft | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Medium and heavy-duty trucks | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Agricultural, lawn and garden machinery and equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Heating and cooling equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Industry-specific manufacturing equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Materials handling equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Measuring, control and scientific instruments | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other scientific and technical instruments | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Computers and peripherals | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office furniture | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other machinery and equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pre-packaged software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Custom-designed software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures |
87. This is a summary of the capital expenditures reported for agriculture, forestry, fishing, hunting, mining, manufacturing, and construction.
Note: You cannot make changes to this page.
Please review the values and, if needed press the Previous button at the bottom of the page to navigate to the previous pages to make any modifications.
| Capital expenditures | |
|---|---|
| Office and administrative buildings | |
| Farm buildings | |
| Manufacturing plants | |
| Industrial service buildings and depots | |
| Industrial laboratories, research and development centres | |
| Warehouses | |
| Other buildings | |
| Parking lots and parking garages | |
| Highway and road structures and networks | |
| Irrigation networks | |
| Other infrastructure | |
| Total non-residential construction | |
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | |
| Special-purpose vehicles | |
| Aircraft | |
| Medium and heavy-duty trucks | |
| Agricultural, lawn and garden machinery and equipment | |
| Heating and cooling equipment | |
| Industry-specific manufacturing equipment | |
| Materials handling equipment | |
| Measuring, control and scientific instruments | |
| Other scientific and technical instruments | |
| Computers and peripherals | |
| Office furniture | |
| Other machinery and equipment | |
| Total machinery and equipment | |
| Pre-packaged software | |
| Custom-designed software | |
| Total software | |
| Total expenditures |
88. Provide the source of funding breakdown of the capital expenditures previously provided for agriculture, forestry, fishing, hunting, mining, manufacturing, and construction.
Note: Sum of a to d should be equal to total capital expenditures reported for agriculture, forestry, fishing, hunting, mining, manufacturing, and construction in question 87.
Sources of funding include government grants, donations, credit and venture capital from external sources according to the level of government (federal, provincial/territorial, and local/regional/municipal). All other sources including internal funding (sales of goods and services, loans, etc.) as well as donations and grants from private sources can be combined under Private and other sources of funding.
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| Municipal or regional government grants and contributions | |
| Provincial and territorial government grants and contributions | |
| Federal government grants and contributions | |
| Private, internal and other sources of funding |
89. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what type of assets received capital expenditures for other economic affairs not elsewhere classified (n.e.c.)?
Include:
Select all that apply.
Other economic affairs not elsewhere classified (n.e.c.): General economic and commercial affairs and services concerning the regulation, construction, extension, improvement, operation and maintenance of communication systems (postal, telephone, telegraph, wireless and satellite communication systems); construction, extension, improvement, operation and maintenance of hotels and restaurants; the distributive trade and the storage and warehousing industry; supervision and regulation of wholesale and retail trade (permits, sales practices, labeling of packaged food and other household goods, inspection of scales and other weighing devices, etc.), as well as warehouses and stores (permits, control of bonded warehouses, etc.); production and dissemination of general information, technical documentation and statistics on communications affairs and services; on prices, on the availability of goods and on other aspects of the distributive trade; on the storage and warehousing industry; on hotel and restaurant affairs and services; activities to support the construction, operation, maintenance or upgrading of communication systems, of hotels and restaurant, or to support the distributive trade and the storage and warehousing industry; price control and rationing schemes operating through retailers or wholesalers regardless of the type of goods involved or intended consumer.
Includes:
Excludes:
Non-residential construction
Office and administrative buildings
Industrial service buildings and depots
e.g., maintenance garages, storage areas
Communication buildings
Hotels and convention centres
Stores and retail outlets
Restaurants and bars
Warehouses
Other commercial properties
e.g., business parks, post offices, mail sortation facilities
Other buildings
Specify other buildings
Parking lots and parking garages
Telecommunications transmission support structures
Telecommunications transmission cables and lines
Exclude optical fibre.
Telecommunications transmission optical fibre cables
Other infrastructure
Specify other infrastructure
Machinery and equipment
Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs
Special-purpose vehicles
e.g., armoured trucks for money and securities transportation
Medium and heavy-duty trucks
Freight and utility trailers
Buses
e.g., vans of a seating capacity of 10 persons or more, electric trackless trolley coaches
Telephone and data communications equipment
e.g., fax machines, telephone switching, local area routers, smartphones
Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment
Computers and peripherals
Office furniture
Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines
Furniture and fixtures
Exclude office furniture.
Commercial cooking and food-warming equipment
Commercial and service industry machinery and equipment (n.e.c.)
e.g., banking and vending machines, coin-operated amusement machines
Measuring, control, and scientific instruments
Space satellites
e.g., meteorological satellites, telecommunication satellites, global positioning system (GPS) receivers
Other machinery and equipment
Specify other machinery and equipment
Software
Pre-packaged software
Custom-designed software
e.g., on contract and in-house development
90. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's capital expenditures for other economic affairs not elsewhere classified (n.e.c.)?
Report in thousands of Canadian dollars.
A) New acquisitions and additions: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
B) Acquisitions of used assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately.
C) Refurbishment and renovations: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected useful life (years): Report the expected life of the asset in years.
Affordable Housing: Include rental housing subsidized by the government. Exclude temporary shelters and housing without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Other Residential Construction: Include the housing portion of multi-purpose projects and of townsites, excluding affordable housing. Exclude buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizens residences) and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Non-Residential assets: expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential buildings, engineering construction, machinery, and equipment (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) |
|
|---|---|---|
| Office and administrative buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Industrial service buildings and depots | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Communication buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Hotels and convention centres | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Stores and retail outlets | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Restaurants and bars | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Warehouses | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other commercial properties | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Parking lots and parking garages | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Telecommunications transmission support structures | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Telecommunications transmission cables and lines | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Telecommunications transmission optical fibre cables | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Special-purpose vehicles | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Medium and heavy-duty trucks | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Freight and utility trailers | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Buses | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Telephone and data communications equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Computers and peripherals | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office furniture | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Furniture and fixtures | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Commercial cooking and food-warming equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Commercial and service industry machinery and equipment (n.e.c.) | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Measuring, control, and scientific instruments | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Space satellites | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other machinery and equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pre-packaged software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Custom-designed software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures |
91. This is a summary of the capital expenditures reported for other economic affairs not elsewhere classified (n.e.c.).
Note: You cannot make changes to this page.
Please review the values and, if needed press the Previous button at the bottom of the page to navigate to the previous pages to make any modifications.
| Capital expenditures | |
|---|---|
| Office and administrative buildings | |
| Industrial service buildings and depots | |
| Communication buildings | |
| Hotels and convention centres | |
| Stores and retail outlets | |
| Restaurants and bars | |
| Warehouses | |
| Other commercial properties | |
| Other buildings | |
| Parking lots and parking garages | |
| Telecommunications transmission support structures | |
| Telecommunications transmission cables and lines | |
| Telecommunications transmission optical fibre cables | |
| Other infrastructure | |
| Total non-residential construction | |
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | |
| Special-purpose vehicles | |
| Medium and heavy-duty trucks | |
| Freight and utility trailers | |
| Buses | |
| Telephone and data communications equipment | |
| Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment | |
| Computers and peripherals | |
| Office furniture | |
| Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines | |
| Furniture and fixtures | |
| Commercial cooking and food-warming equipment | |
| Commercial and service industry machinery and equipment (n.e.c.) | |
| Measuring, control, and scientific instruments | |
| Space satellites | |
| Other machinery and equipment | |
| Total machinery and equipment | |
| Pre-packaged software | |
| Custom-designed software | |
| Total software | |
| Total expenditures |
92. Provide the source of funding breakdown of the capital expenditures previously provided for other economic affairs not elsewhere classified (n.e.c.).
Note: Sum of a to d should be equal to total capital expenditures reported for other economic affairs not elsewhere classified (n.e.c.) in question 91.
Sources of funding include government grants, donations, credit and venture capital from external sources according to the level of government (federal, provincial/territorial, and local/regional/municipal). All other sources including internal funding (sales of goods and services, loans, etc.) as well as donations and grants from private sources can be combined under Private and other sources of funding.
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| Municipal or regional government grants and contributions | |
| Provincial and territorial government grants and contributions | |
| Federal government grants and contributions | |
| Private, internal and other sources of funding |
93. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what type of assets received capital expenditures for general public services?
Include:
Select all that apply.
General public services: The administration, operation or support of executive and legislative organs, of financial and fiscal affairs and services, and of external affairs and services, and basic research undertaken without any particular application or use in view.
Includes:
Non-residential construction
Office and administrative buildings
e.g., parliament and senate buildings, town halls
Industrial service buildings and depots
e.g., maintenance garages, storage areas
Other institutional buildings
e.g., customs houses
Other buildings
Specify other buildings
Parking lots and parking garages
Other infrastructure
Specify other infrastructure
Machinery and equipment
Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs
Freight and utility trailers
Other transportation equipment
Materials handling trucks and tractors
Agricultural, lawn and garden machinery and equipment
Computers and peripherals
Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines
Telephone and data communications equipment
e.g., fax machines, telephone switching, local area routers, smartphones
Televisions and other audio and video equipment
Office furniture
Furniture and fixtures
Exclude office furniture.
Other machinery and equipment
Specify other machinery and equipment
Software
Pre-packaged software
Custom-designed software
e.g., on contract and in-house development
94. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's capital expenditures for general public services?
Report in thousands of Canadian dollars.
A) New acquisitions and additions: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
B) Acquisitions of used assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately.
C) Refurbishment and renovations: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected useful life (years): Report the expected life of the asset in years.
Affordable Housing: Include rental housing subsidized by the government. Exclude temporary shelters and housing without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Other Residential Construction: Include the housing portion of multi-purpose projects and of townsites, excluding affordable housing. Exclude buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizens residences) and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Non-Residential assets: expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential buildings, engineering construction, machinery, and equipment (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) |
|
|---|---|---|
| Office and administrative buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Industrial service buildings and depots | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other institutional buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Parking lots and parking garages | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Freight and utility trailers | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other transportation equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Materials handling trucks and tractors | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Agricultural, lawn and garden machinery and equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Computers and peripherals | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Telephone and data communications equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Televisions and other audio and video equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office furniture | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Furniture and fixtures | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other machinery and equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pre-packaged software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Custom-designed software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures |
95. This is a summary of the capital expenditures reported for general public services.
Note: You cannot make changes to this page.
Please review the values and, if needed press the Previous button at the bottom of the page to navigate to the previous pages to make any modifications.
| Capital expenditures | |
|---|---|
| Office and administrative buildings | |
| Industrial service buildings and depots | |
| Other institutional buildings | |
| Other buildings | |
| Parking lots and parking garages | |
| Other infrastructure | |
| Total non-residential construction | |
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | |
| Freight and utility trailers | |
| Other transportation equipment | |
| Materials handling trucks and tractors | |
| Agricultural, lawn and garden machinery and equipment | |
| Computers and peripherals | |
| Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines | |
| Telephone and data communications equipment | |
| Televisions and other audio and video equipment | |
| Office furniture | |
| Furniture and fixtures | |
| Other machinery and equipment | |
| Total machinery and equipment | |
| Pre-packaged software | |
| Custom-designed software | |
| Total software | |
| Total expenditures |
96. Provide the source of funding breakdown of the capital expenditures previously provided for general public services.
Note: Sum of a to d should be equal to total capital expenditures reported for general public services in question 95.
Sources of funding include government grants, donations, credit and venture capital from external sources according to the level of government (federal, provincial/territorial, and local/regional/municipal). All other sources including internal funding (sales of goods and services, loans, etc.) as well as donations and grants from private sources can be combined under Private and other sources of funding.
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| Municipal or regional government grants and contributions | |
| Provincial and territorial government grants and contributions | |
| Federal government grants and contributions | |
| Private, internal and other sources of funding |
97. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what type of assets received capital expenditures for other function: ?
Include:
Select all that apply.
Non-residential construction
Office and administrative buildings
Industrial service buildings and depots
e.g., maintenance garages, storage areas
Other buildings
Specify other buildings
Highway and road structures and networks
e.g., signs, guardrails, lighting, landscaping, sidewalks, fences
Parking lots and parking garages
Other infrastructure
Specify other infrastructure
Machinery and equipment
Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs
Freight and utility trailers
Other transportation equipment
Materials handling trucks and tractors
Agricultural, lawn and garden machinery and equipment
Computers and peripherals
Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines
Telephone and data communications equipment
e.g., fax machines, telephone switching, local area routers, smartphones
Televisions and other audio and video equipment
Office furniture
Furniture and fixtures
Exclude office furniture.
Other machinery and equipment
Specify other machinery and equipment
Software
Pre-packaged software
Custom-designed software
e.g., on contract and in-house development
98. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's capital expenditures for other function: ?
Report in thousands of Canadian dollars.
A) New acquisitions and additions: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
B) Acquisitions of used assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately.
C) Refurbishment and renovations: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected useful life (years): Report the expected life of the asset in years.
Affordable Housing: Include rental housing subsidized by the government. Exclude temporary shelters and housing without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Other Residential Construction: Include the housing portion of multi-purpose projects and of townsites, excluding affordable housing. Exclude buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizens residences) and associated expenditures on services (these should be reported in non-residential construction).
Non-Residential assets: expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential buildings, engineering construction, machinery, and equipment (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) |
|
|---|---|---|
| Office and administrative buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Industrial service buildings and depots | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other buildings | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Highway and road structures and networks | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Parking lots and parking garages | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other infrastructure | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Freight and utility trailers | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other transportation equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Materials handling trucks and tractors | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Agricultural, lawn and garden machinery and equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Computers and peripherals | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Telephone and data communications equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Televisions and other audio and video equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Office furniture | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Furniture and fixtures | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Other machinery and equipment | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Pre-packaged software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures | ||
| Custom-designed software | ||
| New acquisitions and additions | ||
| Acquisitions of used assets | ||
| Refurbishment and renovations | ||
| Total capital expenditures |
99. This is a summary of the capital expenditures reported for other function: .
Note: You cannot make changes to this page.
Please review the values and, if needed press the Previous button at the bottom of the page to navigate to the previous pages to make any modifications.
| Capital expenditures | |
|---|---|
| Office and administrative buildings | |
| Industrial service buildings and depots | |
| Other buildings | |
| Highway and road structures and networks | |
| Parking lots and parking garages | |
| Other infrastructure | |
| Total non-residential construction | |
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | |
| Freight and utility trailers | |
| Other transportation equipment | |
| Materials handling trucks and tractors | |
| Agricultural, lawn and garden machinery and equipment | |
| Computers and peripherals | |
| Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines | |
| Telephone and data communications equipment | |
| Televisions and other audio and video equipment | |
| Office furniture | |
| Furniture and fixtures | |
| Other machinery and equipment | |
| Total machinery and equipment | |
| Pre-packaged software | |
| Custom-designed software | |
| Total software | |
| Total expenditures |
100. Provide the source of funding breakdown of the capital expenditures previously provided for other function: .
Note: Sum of a to d should be equal to total capital expenditures reported for other function: in question 99.
Sources of funding include government grants, donations, credit and venture capital from external sources according to the level of government (federal, provincial/territorial, and local/regional/municipal). All other sources including internal funding (sales of goods and services, loans, etc.) as well as donations and grants from private sources can be combined under Private and other sources of funding.
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| Municipal or regional government grants and contributions | |
| Provincial and territorial government grants and contributions | |
| Federal government grants and contributions | |
| Private, internal and other sources of funding |
The next questions cover the capital and repair expenditures made by this organization in order to prevent, reduce or eliminate pollution and other forms of degradation of the environment while performing your production activity, i.e., within your organization. For example, the purchase of energy-efficient heating and cooling systems, the installation of energy-saving lighting systems, or the purchase of electric vehicles.
Expenditures made to restore the environment from a degraded state are included. Exclude expenditures made to improve employee health, workplace safety, and site beautification. Please report all environmental protection or resources management expenditures whether or not they are in response to current or anticipated Canadian or international regulations, conventions or voluntary agreements.
101. For the fiscal year, did this organization have capital expenditures for environmental protection and resources management activities, such as purchase of electric vehicles, investment in efficient lighting systems, or any of the ones listed below?
Environmental protection activities are:
Resources management activities are:
Environmental protection expenditures: all 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.
Include expenditures that this specific operation 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; 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.
102. For the fiscal year, for which of the following environmental protection and resources management activities did this organization have capital expenditures?
Select all that apply.
Solid waste management
Examples of related technologies:
Collection-related goods and technologies:
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:
High-level radioactive waste: waste that contains or is contaminated with radionuclides at a concentration or radioactivity level that is high enough that shielding is required during normal handling and transportation.
Wastewater management
Examples of related technologies:
Physical or chemical treatment of industrial wastewater:
Centralized physical or chemical and biological treatment of sewage:
Air pollution management
Examples of related technologies:
Physical or chemical treatment technologies:
Greenhouse gas control technologies:
Air quality and air pollution technologies: low emitting burners.
Monitoring and compliance technologies:
Protection and remediation of soil, groundwater and surface water
Examples of related activities:
In situ biological treatments:
Ex situ biological treatments:
In situ physical and chemical treatments:
Ex situ physical and chemical treatments:
In situ thermal treatments:
Ex situ thermal treatments:
Containment
Heat and energy savings and management
Examples of related goods and technologies:
Efficient industrial or commercial equipment:
Demand management technologies:
Energy storage technologies:
Production of renewable energy
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 and ocean 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.
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: systems and equipment for energy production from wave, tidal, and ocean thermal energy conversion systems.
Environmental protection activities
Solid waste management
Capital expenditures related to non-hazardous and hazardous solid waste collection, transport, treatment, storage, disposal, recycling, and composting, and activities related to measurement, control, and laboratories.
Exclude capital expenditures on sewage or wastewater management, and treatment of high-level radioactive waste.
Wastewater management
Capital 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. Include capital expenditures related to treatment of cooling water for disposal, installation of sewage infrastructure, expenditures related to the use, collection, treatment and disposal of sewage (including septic tanks), and activities related to measurement, control, and laboratories.
Exclude capital expenditures on the protection of groundwater from pollutant infiltration and the cleaning up of soil and water bodies after pollution.
Air pollution management
Capital expenditures related to air pollution prevention (i.e., the elimination of pollution at the source) and air pollution abatement and control (i.e., end-of-pipe processes), including monitoring.
e.g., scrubbers, air and off-gas treatments, low emitting burners, leak detection technologies
Exclude heat or energy savings and management, the purchase or lease of fuel efficient vehicles and equipment, the production of renewable or clean energy, the purchase of biofuels, biochemicals or biomaterials, and the purchase of carbon offset credits and carbon taxes.
Protection and remediation of soil, groundwater and surface water
Capital expenditures for the prevention of pollution infiltration, cleaning up of soil and water bodies, protection of soil from erosion, salinization and physical degradation, monitoring, and site reclamation and decommissioning. Include decommissioning expenditures incurred in the fiscal year even if the site closed before this period.
Exclude capital expenditures on wastewater management.
Protection of biodiversity and habitat
Capital 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 monitoring.
Noise and vibration abatement
Capital expenditures related to the control, reduction and abatement of industrial and transport noise and vibration related to the activities of this organization.
Exclude the abatement of noise and vibration for the purpose of workplace protection.
Protection against radiation
Capital expenditures for the reduction or elimination of the negative consequences of high-level radiation, including the handling, transportation and treatment of high-level radioactive waste - that is, waste that requires shielding during normal handling and transportation because of its high radionuclide content.
Exclude the management of low-level radioactive waste, and the protection against radiation for the purpose of workplace protection.
Other environmental protection activities
Capital expenditures related to other initiatives not listed above. Report imputed interest on funds held in trust against future environmental liabilities.
Exclude capital expenditures related to research and development, to heat or energy savings and management, the purchase or lease of fuel efficient vehicles and transportation goods, the production of renewable or clean energy, and the purchase of biofuels, biochemicals or biomaterials.
Resources management activities
Heat and energy savings and management
Capital expenditures related to minimizing the intake of energy through in-process modifications as well as the minimisation of heat and energy losses. This includes in-process modifications, insulation activities, energy recovery, monitoring related to energy saving, and lighting upgrades.
Use of fuel efficient vehicles and transportation goods or technologies
Capital expenditures related to the purchase or the lease of electric and hybrid vehicles, vehicles using alternative fuels, alternative fuel retrofits on existing vehicles, and low-rolling resistance tires.
Production of nuclear energy, whether for sale or own use
Capital expenditures related to the production of nuclear power.
Production of energy from renewable sources, whether for sale or own use
Capital expenditures related to the production of electricity or heat from renewable sources.
e.g., wind, geothermal, hydro, solar, and waste to energy
103. For the fiscal year, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for each environmental protection and resources management activity?
When precise figures are not available, provide your best estimate.
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| Environmental protection activity | |
| Solid waste management | |
| Wastewater management | |
| Air pollution management | |
| Protection and remediation of soil, groundwater and surface water | |
| Protection of biodiversity and habitat | |
| Noise and vibration abatement | |
| Protection against radiation | |
| Other environmental protection activities | |
| Resources management activity | |
| Heat and energy savings and management | |
| Use of fuel efficient vehicles and transportation goods or technologies | |
| Production of nuclear energy, whether for sale or own use | |
| Production of energy from renewable sources, whether for sale or own use |
104. Which of the following were drivers to the adoption of new or significantly improved clean technologies, systems or equipment for this organization during the fiscal year?
Select all that apply.
105. Which of the following were obstacles to the adoption of new or significantly improved clean technologies, systems or equipment for this organization during the fiscal year?
Select all that apply.
106. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's total non-capitalized repair and maintenance expenditures for the following functions of government?
Non-capitalized repair and maintenance expenditures for Non-residential construction
This represents the repair and maintenance of assets in contrast to the acquisition of assets or the renovation of assets.
Include:
Non-capitalized repair and maintenance expenditures for Machinery and equipment
Include: equipment maintenance such as oil changes and lubrication of vehicles and other machinery, etc.
| Non-residential construction | Machinery and equipment | |
|---|---|---|
| Road transport | ||
| Public transit | ||
| Other transport not elsewhere classified (n.e.c.) | ||
| Water supply | ||
| Community amenities not elsewhere classified (n.e.c.) | ||
| Storm water management | ||
| Waste water management | ||
| Waste management | ||
| Other community amenities and environmental protection | ||
| Defense, public order and safety | ||
| Hospital services | ||
| Health except hospital services | ||
| Housing | ||
| Social protection other than housing | ||
| Education | ||
| Recreation, culture, and religion | ||
| Electricity | ||
| Fuel and Energy | ||
| Tourism | ||
| General economic, commercial and labour affairs | ||
| Agriculture, forest, fishing, hunting, mining, manufacturing and construction | ||
| Other economic affairs not elsewhere classified (n.e.c.) | ||
| General public services | ||
| Other functions |
107. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, were any internal costs (work done by own labour force) included in the reported capital or repair expenditures?
Include internal construction or development costs (such as materials and labour) that are capitalized as part of the asset costs (such as own employee installation or erection of fixed assets, systems and software development staff).
Include all materials and supplies provided free to contractors and all architects, engineering and consultants fees and similar services.
108. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, provide details on the own account (internal) costs imputed to fixed assets or repair and maintenance expenses.
Salaries and Wages: Show the total value of salaries and wages paid to your employees. Salaries and wages are gross earnings before deductions such as income tax and include incentive bonuses and vacation pay but exclude fringe benefits.
Materials and Supplies: Report total cost of materials and supplies used by your own employees and those provided free to contractors relating to the expenditures reported.
Other charges: Examples of other charges are insurance, power, telephone and also architectural, legal, and engineering fees considered to be applicable to the expenditures reported.
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| Non-residential Construction capital expenditures | |
| Salaries and wages | |
| Materials and supplies | |
| Other charges | |
| Non-capitalized repair and maintenance construction | |
| Salaries and wages | |
| Materials and supplies | |
| Other charges | |
| Machinery and equipment capital expenditures | |
| Salaries and wages | |
| Materials and supplies | |
| Other charges | |
| Software development capital expenditures | |
| Salaries and wages | |
| Materials and supplies | |
| Other charges |
109. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, did this organization dispose or sell any fixed assets?
Include fixed assets which were disposed of or sold, even if traded in for credit in the acquisition/purchase of new fixed assets.
110. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, which assets were disposed of or sold?
When land and buildings are sold together, please report the land separately.
Select all that apply.
Land
Land
Residential construction
Affordable housing
Senior housing
Nursing home units with exclusive kitchen and bathroom
Student residence units with exclusive kitchen and bathroom
Other residential buildings
Specify other residential buildings
Non-residential buildings
Industrial service buildings and depots
e.g., maintenance garages, storage areas, aircraft hangars, aircraft maintenance buildings
Manufacturing plants
Farm buildings
Industrial laboratories, research and development centres
Office and administrative buildings
e.g., parliament and senate buildings, town halls, bank buildings
Warehouses
e.g., refrigerated storage, freight terminals
Hotels and convention centres
Stores and retail outlets
Service stations
e.g., gas stations, automotive repair shops
Restaurants and bars
Passenger terminal buildings and airports
Sports facilities with spectator capacity
Other indoor recreational facilities
Theatres and halls
e.g., concert halls, exhibition halls, movie theatres
Museums
Libraries
Religious centres and memorial sites
Historical sites
Daycare centres
Student residence units without exclusive kitchen and bathroom
Shelters and other collective dwellings
Schools, colleges, universities and other educational buildings
Hospitals
Clinics and other medical buildings
Nursing home units without exclusive kitchen and bath
Public security facilities
e.g., prisons, police stations, fire stations, detention centres, court houses
Communication buildings
Other institutional buildings
e.g., park buildings, customs houses, meteorological stations
Other commercial properties
e.g., business parks, post offices, mail sortation facilities.
Other non-residential buildings
Specify other non-residential buildings
Other infrastructure
Highway and road structures and networks
e.g., signs, guardrails, lighting, landscaping, sidewalks, bicycle paths, pedestrian lanes, traffic control infrastructure
Bridges
e.g., overpasses
Tunnels
Parking lots and parking garages
Railway lines and tracks, including light-rail
e.g., signs, lighting, security and traffic control infrastructure
Runways
e.g., airfields, heliport terminal, tarmac, runway lighting
Other transportation infrastructure
e.g., loading facilities, terminals excluding warehouses
Flood protection infrastructure
e.g., storm sewers, drains, pipes, dams, reservoirs
Water filtration and treatment plants
Water supply infrastructure
e.g., aquaducts mains, trunk and distribution mains, water reservoirs, water wells, fill stations
Sewage and wastewater treatment plants
Other sewage infrastructure
e.g., collection and disposal infrastructure
Waste disposal facilities
Outdoor recreational facilities
Marinas
Seaports and harbours
Canals and waterways
Other marine infrastructure
Hydro-power plants
Fossil fuel or steam power plants
Wind and solar power plants
Nuclear power plants
Power transmission networks
Power distribution networks
Other electric power infrastructure
Irrigation networks
Pollution abatement and control infrastructure
Production facilities in oil and gas extraction
Natural gas processing plants
Pipelines
Other oil and gas infrastructure
e.g., gas mains, bulk storage, pumping sites, oil or gas storage tanks, injection wells, seismograph stations
Telecommunications transmission support structures
Telecommunications transmission cables and lines
Exclude optical fibre.
Telecommunications transmission optical fibre cables
Other infrastructure
Specify other infrastructure
Machinery and equipment
Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs
Medium and heavy-duty trucks
Buses
e.g., vans of a seating capacity of 10 persons or more, electric trackless trolley coaches
Freight and utility trailers
Special-purpose vehicles
e.g., ambulances, fire trucks, prison vans, trucks fitted with elevator platforms, tow trucks, armoured trucks for money and securities transportation
Materials handling trucks and tractors
Other materials handling equipment
e.g., winches, aerial work platforms, hoists, conveyors
Locomotives, railway rolling stock, and rapid transit equipment
Non-military Aircraft
Unmanned aerial vehicles
e.g., drones
Non-military ships, barges and platforms
e.g., ferry boats, tug boats
Boats and personal watercraft
Other transportation equipment
e.g., all-terrain vehicles
Computers and peripherals
Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines
Office furniture
Furniture and fixtures
Exclude office furniture.
Playground, gymnasium, exercise, and other athletic equipment
Telephone and data communications equipment
e.g., fax machines, telephone switching, local area routers, smartphones
Televisions and other audio and video equipment
Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment
e.g., traffic control equipment, surveillance cameras
Navigational and guidance instruments
e.g., ultrasonic detecting equipment, radio navigational aid, radio direction finders
Water treatment equipment
Filters and strainers for fluids and fluid power systems
Pumps and compressors
Commercial cooking and food-warming equipment
Commercial and service industry machinery and equipment, (n.e.c.)
e.g., banking and vending machines, coin-operated amusement machines, commercial laundry machines
Powered hand tools
Construction machinery and equipment
Nuclear reactor steam supply system equipment
Engines and mechanical power transmission equipment
Oil and gas field production machinery and equipment
Industry-specific manufacturing equipment
Heavy-gauge metal containers
e.g., intermodal
Metalworking machinery
Other miscellaneous industrial machinery and non-motorized equipment, n.e.c.
Electric motors and generators
Switchgear, switchboards, relays, and industrial control apparatus
Turbines, turbine generators, and turbine generator sets
Boilers, metal tanks, industrial valves and seals
Heating and cooling equipment
Exclude household appliances.
Power and distribution transformers
Instruments for measuring electricity
Agricultural, lawn and garden machinery and equipment
Space satellites
e.g., meteorological satellites, telecommunication satellites, global positioning system (GPS) receivers
Medical and laboratory equipment
e.g., medical furnishings and laboratory apparatus
Exclude scientific instruments.
Medical, dental, and personal safety supplies
Industrial and commercial fans, blowers and air purification equipment
Measuring, control and scientific instruments
e.g., counting devices, parking meters, water metres, laboratory equipment
Other scientific and technical instruments
Military aircraft
Military ships
Military armoured vehicles
Automatic weapons, machine guns, rocket launchers, howitzers, mortars, and other weapons
Include parts.
Waste and scrap of iron and steel
Waste and scrap of aluminum and aluminum alloys
Waste and scrap of other non-ferrous metals
Other machinery and equipment
Specify other machinery and equipment
Software
Pre-packaged software
Custom-designed software
e.g., on contract and in-house development
111. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were the selling price and gross book value of the disposed or sold land?
When land and buildings are sold together, please report the land separately.
Selling Price: The total value, or the sales of fixed assets which were disposed of or sold, even if traded in for credit in the acquisition or purchase of new fixed assets. When land and buildings are sold together, please report the selling price of the land separately, along with other land sales.
Gross Book Value: This value should represent total capital expenditures for an asset, at and since the time of original construction or purchase, including all subsequent capital expenditures for the purpose of modernization, expansion, etc. Any subsidies received should not be subtracted. For land transfers, please report the market value in the gross book value section.
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| Land | |
| Selling price | |
| Gross book value |
112. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, provide details of this organization's disposals and sales of fixed assets for residential construction.
When land and buildings are sold together, please report the land separately.
Selling Price: The total value, or the sales of fixed assets which were disposed of or sold, even if traded in for credit in the acquisition or purchase of new fixed assets. When land and buildings are sold together, please report the selling price of the land separately, along with other land sales.
Gross Book Value: This value should represent total capital expenditures for an asset, at and since the time of original construction or purchase, including all subsequent capital expenditures for the purpose of modernization, expansion, etc. Any subsidies received should not be subtracted.
Age: Report the age of the fixed asset at the time of disposal. If you have disposed of or sold similar assets of varying ages, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the ages in years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Asset A costs $1,000.00 and has a useful life of 20 years
Asset B costs $100.00 and has a useful life of 10 years
Asset C costs $10.00 and has a useful life of 30 years
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Years | |
|---|---|---|
| Affordable housing | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Senior housing | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Nursing home units with exclusive kitchen and bathroom | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Student residence units with exclusive kitchen and bathroom | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Other residential buildings | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age |
113. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, provide details of this organization's disposals and sales of fixed assets for non-residential buildings.
When land and buildings are sold together, please report the land separately.
Selling Price: The total value, or the sales of fixed assets which were disposed of or sold, even if traded in for credit in the acquisition or purchase of new fixed assets. When land and buildings are sold together, please report the selling price of the land separately, along with other land sales.
Gross Book Value: This value should represent total capital expenditures for an asset, at and since the time of original construction or purchase, including all subsequent capital expenditures for the purpose of modernization, expansion, etc. Any subsidies received should not be subtracted.
Age: Report the age of the fixed asset at the time of disposal. If you have disposed of or sold similar assets of varying ages, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the ages in years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Asset A costs $1,000.00 and has a useful life of 20 years
Asset B costs $100.00 and has a useful life of 10 years
Asset C costs $10.00 and has a useful life of 30 years
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Years | |
|---|---|---|
| Industrial service buildings and depots | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Manufacturing plants | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Farm buildings | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Industrial laboratories, research and development centres | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Office and administrative buildings | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Warehouses | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Hotels and convention centres | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Stores and retail outlets | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Service stations | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Restaurants and bars | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Passenger terminal buildings and airports | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Sports facilities with spectator capacity | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Other indoor recreational facilities | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Theatres and halls | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Museums | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Libraries | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Religious centres and memorial sites | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Historical sites | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Daycare centres | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Student residence units without exclusive kitchen and bathroom | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Shelters and other collective dwellings | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Schools, colleges, universities and other educational building | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Hospitals | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Clinics and other medical buildings | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Nursing home units without exclusive kitchen and bath | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Public security facilities | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Communication buildings | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Other institutional buildings | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Other commercial properties | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Other non-residential buildings | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age |
114. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, provide details of this organization's disposals and sales of fixed assets for other infrastructure.
When land and buildings are sold together, please report the land separately.
Selling Price: The total value, or the sales of fixed assets which were disposed of or sold, even if traded in for credit in the acquisition or purchase of new fixed assets. When land and buildings are sold together, please report the selling price of the land separately, along with other land sales.
Gross Book Value: This value should represent total capital expenditures for an asset, at and since the time of original construction or purchase, including all subsequent capital expenditures for the purpose of modernization, expansion, etc. Any subsidies received should not be subtracted.
Age: Report the age of the fixed asset at the time of disposal. If you have disposed of or sold similar assets of varying ages, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the ages in years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Asset A costs $1,000.00 and has a useful life of 20 years
Asset B costs $100.00 and has a useful life of 10 years
Asset C costs $10.00 and has a useful life of 30 years
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Years | |
|---|---|---|
| Highway and road structures and networks | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Bridges | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Tunnels | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Parking lots and parking garages | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Railway lines and tracks, including light-rail | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Runways | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Other transportation infrastructure | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Flood protection infrastructure | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Water filtration and treatment plants | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Water supply infrastructure | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Sewage and wastewater treatment plants | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Other sewage infrastructure | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Waste disposal facilities | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Outdoor recreational facilities | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Marinas | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Seaports and harbours | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Canals and waterways | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Other marine infrastructure | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Hydro-power plants | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Fossil fuel or steam power plants | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Wind and solar power plants | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Nuclear power plants | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Power transmission networks | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Power distribution networks | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Other electric power infrastructure | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Irrigation networks | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Pollution abatement and control infrastructure | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Production facilities in oil and gas extraction | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Natural gas processing plants | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Pipelines | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Other oil and gas infrastructure | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Telecommunications transmission support structures | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Telecommunications transmission cables and lines | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Telecommunications transmission optical fibre cables | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Other infrastructure | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age |
115. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, provide details of this organization's disposals and sales of fixed assets for machinery and equipment.
Selling Price: The total value, or the sales of fixed assets which were disposed of or sold, even if traded in for credit in the acquisition or purchase of new fixed assets. When land and buildings are sold together, please report the selling price of the land separately, along with other land sales.
Gross Book Value: This value should represent total capital expenditures for an asset, at and since the time of original construction or purchase, including all subsequent capital expenditures for the purpose of modernization, expansion, etc. Any subsidies received should not be subtracted.
Age: Report the age of the fixed asset at the time of disposal. If you have disposed of or sold similar assets of varying ages, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the ages in years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Asset A costs $1,000.00 and has a useful life of 20 years
Asset B costs $100.00 and has a useful life of 10 years
Asset C costs $10.00 and has a useful life of 30 years
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Years | |
|---|---|---|
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Medium and heavy-duty trucks | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Buses | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Freight and utility trailers | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Special-purpose vehicles | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Materials handling trucks and tractors | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Other materials handling equipment | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Locomotives, railway rolling stock, and rapid transit equipment | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Non-military Aircraft | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Unmanned aerial vehicles | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Non-military ships, barges and platforms | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Boats and personal watercraft | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Other transportation equipment | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Computers and peripherals | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Office furniture | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Furniture and fixtures | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Playground, gymnasium, exercise, and other athletic equipment | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Telephone and data communications equipment | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Televisions and other audio and video equipment | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Navigational and guidance instruments | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Water treatment equipment | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Filters and strainers for fluids and fluid power systems | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Pumps and compressors | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Commercial cooking and food-warming equipment | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Commercial and service industry machinery and equipment, (n.e.c.) | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Powered hand tools | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Construction machinery and equipment | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Nuclear reactor steam supply system equipment | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Engines and mechanical power transmission equipment | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Oil and gas field production machinery and equipment | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Industry-specific manufacturing equipment | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Heavy-gauge metal containers | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Metalworking machinery | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Other miscellaneous industrial machinery and non-motorized equipment, n.e.c. | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Electric motors and generators | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Switchgear, switchboards, relays, and industrial control apparatus | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Turbines, turbine generators, and turbine generator sets | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Boilers, metal tanks, industrial valves and seals | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Heating and cooling equipment | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Power and distribution transformers | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Instruments for measuring electricity | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Agricultural, lawn and garden machinery and equipment | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Space satellites | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Medical and laboratory equipment | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Medical, dental, and personal safety supplies | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Industrial and commercial fans, blowers and air purification equipment | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Measuring, control and scientific instruments | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Other scientific and technical instruments | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Military aircraft | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Military ships | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Military armoured vehicles | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Automatic weapons, machine guns, rocket launchers, howitzers, mortars, and other weapons | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Waste and scrap of iron and steel | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Waste and scrap of aluminum and aluminum alloys | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Waste and scrap of other non-ferrous metals | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Other machinery and equipment | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age |
116. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, provide details of this organization's disposals and sales of fixed assets for software.
Selling Price: The total value, or the sales of fixed assets which were disposed of or sold, even if traded in for credit in the acquisition or purchase of new fixed assets. When land and buildings are sold together, please report the selling price of the land separately, along with other land sales.
Gross Book Value: This value should represent total capital expenditures for an asset, at and since the time of original construction or purchase, including all subsequent capital expenditures for the purpose of modernization, expansion, etc. Any subsidies received should not be subtracted.
Age: Report the age of the fixed asset at the time of disposal. If you have disposed of or sold similar assets of varying ages, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the ages in years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Asset A costs $1,000.00 and has a useful life of 20 years
Asset B costs $100.00 and has a useful life of 10 years
Asset C costs $10.00 and has a useful life of 30 years
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Years | |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-packaged software | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age | ||
| Custom-designed software | ||
| Selling price | ||
| Gross book value | ||
| Age |
117. Does this business have a website?
Specify the business website address 1
Specify the business website address 2
Specify the business website address 3
e.g., www.example.ca
Statistics Canada is piloting a web data extraction initiative, also known as web scraping, which uses software to search and compile publicly available data from organizational websites. As a result, we may visit the website for this organization to search for, and compile, additional information. This initiative should allow us to reduce the reporting burden on organizations, as well as produce additional statistical indicators to ensure that our data remain accurate and relevant.
We will do our utmost to ensure the data are collected in a manner that will not affect the functionality of the website. Any data collected will be used by Statistics Canada for statistical and research purposes only, in accordance with the agency's mandate.
Please visit Statistics Canada's web scraping initiative page for more information.
Please visit Statistics Canada's transparency and accountability page to learn more.
If you have any questions or concerns, please contact Statistics Canada Client Services, toll-free at 1-877-949-9492 (TTY: 1-800-363-7629) or by email at infostats@statcan.gc.ca. Additional information about this survey can be found by selecting the following link:
Annual Capital and Repair Expenditures Survey: Actual, Preliminary and Intentions (CAPEX)
118. 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.
119. 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?
Who is the best person to contact about this questionnaire?
120. How long did it take to complete this questionnaire?
Include the time spent gathering the necessary information.
121. Do you have any comments about this questionnaire?
Statistics Canada and Health Canada have partnered to conduct the Survey of Oral Health Care Providers (SOHCP). This biennial survey collects information on the financial and operational characteristics of oral health care providers in Canada.
The questions focus on operating revenue and expenses, billing policies, staffing and vacancies, services offered, patient capacity, and operational challenges.
Results from the survey will help evaluate the potential impacts of the Canadian Dental Care Plan on the oral health system and the delivery of oral health services in Canada.
These data are crucial in helping governments devise policies that support access to dental care, improve oral health outcomes for Canadians, and provide an effective work environment for oral health care workers.
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.
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 response 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, Public Sector Statistics Division
150 Tunney's Pasture Driveway
Ottawa, Ontario
K1A 0T6
You may also contact us by email at Statistics Canada Help Desk- this link will open in a new window or by fax at 613-951-6583.
For this survey, there are Section 12 agreements with the statistical agencies of Prince Edward Island, the Northwest Territories and Nunavut.
For agreements with provincial and territorial government organizations, the shared data will be limited to information pertaining to entities located within the jurisdiction of the respective province or territory.
Coverage statement
Report dollar amounts in thousands of Canadian dollars.
Percentages should be rounded to whole numbers.
When precise figures are not available, provide your best estimates.
Enter "0" if there is no value to report.
This questionnaire should be completed by the person most knowledgeable of the day-to-day activities of this practice.
Statistics Canada is committed to respecting the privacy of consultation survey participants. All personal information created, held or collected by the agency is protected in accordance with the Privacy Act.
Please complete this questionnaire and submit it within 21 days of receipt.
You can print this questionnaire once you have completed and submitted it.
1. Verify or provide the business or organization legal and operating name, and correct information if needed.
Note: Legal name should only be modified to correct a spelling error or typo.
2. Verify or provide the contact information for the designated contact person for the business or organization, and correct information if 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
Mailing address (number and street)
City
Province, territory or state
Postal code or ZIP code (Format: Letter digit letter space digit letter digit or 5 digits dash 4 digits)
Example: A9A 9A9 or 12345-1234
Country
Email address
Example: user@example.gov.ca
Telephone number (including area code)
Example: 123-123-1234
Extension number (if applicable)
Fax number (including area code)
Example: 123-123-1234
3. Verify or provide the current operational status of the business or organization identified by the legal and operating name above.
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).
NAICS description text
Description and examples
NAICS description text
Examples and inclusions/exclusion text
Provide a brief but precise description of this business or organization's main activity e.g., breakfast cereal manufacturing, shoe store, software development
5. You indicated that NAICS description text is not the current main activity.
Was this business or organization's main activity ever classified as NAICS description text.
6. Search and select the industry classification code that best corresponds to this business or organization's main activity.
How to search:
Select this business or organization's activity sector (optional)
Enter keywords or a brief description, then press the Search button
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
1. What are the start and end dates of this business's or organization's most recently completed fiscal year?
For this survey, the end date should fall between April 1st, 2023 and March 31st, 2024.
Fiscal Year Start date
Example: YYYY-MM-DD
Fiscal Year End date
Example: YYYY-MM-DD
2. What is the reason the reporting period does not cover a full year?
Select all that apply.
3. Which of the following best describes this business or organization?
4. For the reporting period ending between April 1st, 2023 to March 31st, 2024, which of the following best describes this practices type of service?
5. For the reporting period ending between April 1st, 2023 to March 31st, 2024, what was this practice's total operating revenue?
Report dollar amounts in thousands of Canadian dollars.
When precise figure is not available, please provide your best estimate.
Total operating revenue (CAN$ '000)
6. For the reporting period ending between April 1st 2023 to March 31st, 2024, what was this practice's total operating expenses?
Report dollar amounts in thousands of Canadian dollars.
When precises figure is not available, please provide your best estimate.
Total operating expenses (CAN$'000)
7. On the last day of your fiscal period ending between April 1st, 2023 and March 31st, 2024, what was the total number of employees and contractors at this practice?
Note: A detailed breakdown may be requested in other sections.
Instructions:
an individual is to be recorded only once as an employee or a contractor
working owners are to be reported as employees
employees working on a commission basis are to be reported as contractors.
Include:
all full-time and part-time employees and contractors who received a T4 or T4A during the reporting period
all full-time and part-time contractors hired through agencies and report them as contractors
working owners and co-owners of this practice
employees who worked on-site, off-site, or who were on paid leave.
Exclude:
all casual employees, casual contractors and volunteers
employees on unpaid leave, such as those on extended sick leave who were receiving insurance benefits
employees on parental leave (maternity or paternity) who were receiving a top-up to their received benefits.
Employees: Refer to persons for whom this practice completed a T4 and who were active on the payroll during the reference period.
Contractors: Refer to persons for who this practice completed a T4A during the reference period and persons whom were hired through agencies.
Casual: Refers to those employed on a non-continuing or irregular basis, such as those who temporarily relieve regular employees on vacation or sick leave, or those who are hired temporarily for such casual jobs as snow removal, office overload, etc.
When precise figure is not available, please provide your best estimate.
If a question does not apply to your practice, enter "0" in the corresponding line.
a. Total number of employees
Include full-time and part-time employees.
Number
b.Total number of contractors
Include full-time and part-time contractors.
Number
Total employees and contractors
Sum of (a+b)
Number
8. Of the total employees on the last day of your fiscal period ending between April 1st, 2023 and March 31st, 2024 reported at question 7, what was the total number of employees and contractors for each of the following categories?
Instructions:
when an employee or contractor fills more than one position, that individual is to be recorded only once under the position in which the majority of their time is spent
an individual is to be recorded only once as an employee or a contractor
working owners are to be reported as employees
employees working on a commission basis are to be reported as contractors.
Include:
all full-time and part-time employees and contractors who received a T4 or T4A during the reporting period
all full-time and part-time contractors hired through agencies and report them as contractors
working owners and co-owners of this practice
employees who worked on-site, off-site, or who were on paid leave.
Exclude:
all casual employees, casual contractors and volunteers
employees on unpaid leave, such as those on extended sick leave who were receiving insurance benefits
employees on parental leave (maternity or paternity)
Full time: Refers to persons who worked 30 or more hours per week on average during the reference period.
Part time: Refers to persons who worked less than 30 hours per week on average during the reference period.
Employees: Refer to persons for whom this practice completed a T4 and who were active on the payroll during the reference period.
Contractors: Refer to persons for who this practice completed a T4A during the reference period and persons whom were hired through agencies.
When precise figure is not available, please provide your best estimate.
If a question does not apply to your practice, enter "0" in the corresponding line.
a. Dentists
Include general dentists and dental specialists
b. Dental assistants
c. Dental hygienists
d. Dental technologists and technicians
Include ceramic denture moulder, denture wax pattern former, orthodontic band maker.
e. Dental therapists
f. Denturists
g. Administrative staff
Include receptionists, dental coordinators, practice managers, bookkeepers.
h. Other staff members
Specify other staff members
Total
Sum of (a + b + c + d + e + f + g + h).
9. On the last day of your fiscal period ending between April 1st, 2023 and March 31st, 2024, what was the total number of job vacancies for each of the following categories?
Instructions:
include all full-time and part-time job vacancies for employees or contractors
exclude all job vacancies for casual employment, casual contractors and volunteers.
Full time: Refers to persons who worked 30 or more hours per week on average during the reference period.
Part time: Refers to persons who worked less than 30 hours per week on average during the reference period.
Job vacancies: A job was vacant if it met all of the following conditions:
it was vacant on the reference date
there were tasks to be carried out on the reference date for the job in question
the employer was actively recruiting outside the organization to fill the job.
The jobs could be full-time or part-time.
When precise figure is not available, please provide your best estimate.
If a question does not apply to your facility, enter "0" in the corresponding line.
a. Dentists
Include general dentists and dental specialists.
b. Dental assistants
c. Dental hygienists
d. Dental technologists and technicians
Include ceramic denture moulder, denture wax pattern former, orthodontic band maker.
e. Dental therapists
f. Denturists
g. Administrative staff
Include receptionists, dental coordinators, practice managers, bookkeepers.
h. All other job vacancies
Specify other job vacancies
Total job vacancies
Sum of (a + b + c + d + e + f + g + h).
10. For the reporting period ending between April 1st, 2023 to March 31st, 2024, which of the following service options were offered by this practice?
Select all that apply.
OR
11. For the reporting ending between April 1st, 2023 and March 31st, 2024, what special needs was this practice able to accommodate on-site?
Accommodate: Measures in place to support access and enable treatment.
Select all that apply.
Special needs able to accommodate
OR
12. For the reporting period ending between April 1st, 2023 and March 31st, 2024, did the practice experience any barriers in accommodating special needs patients?
Accommodate: Measures in place to support access and enable treatment.
Select all that apply.
OR
13. On the last day of your fiscal period ending between April 1st, 2023 and March 31st, 2024, what was the number of active patients belonging to this practice?
Active patient: A patient who has been seen within the last 12 months.
When precise figure is not available, please provide your best estimate.
Number of active patients
14. For the reporting period ending between April 1st, 2023 and March 31st,2024, did this practice see any patients under the age of 3 years (inclusive) for non-emergency oral assessments?
e.g., CDA (Canadian Dental Association) procedure code 01011 or CDH (Canadian Dental Hygienists’ Association) procedure code 00131
15. Of the number of active patients reported at question 13, what was the percentage of patients who were covered and not covered by an insurance plan or government program?
Total should equal to 100%.
When precise figure is not available, please provide your best estimate.
a. Patients covered by an insurance plan or government program
Percentage of patients
b. Patients not covered by an insurance plan or government program
Percentage of patients
Total percentage of patients
16.For the reporting period ending between April1st, 2023 and March 31st, 2024, of the patients covered by an insurance plan or government program, what was the percentage of patients associated with the following categories?
Total should equal to 100%
When precise figure is not available, please provide your best estimate.
a. The practice bills and receives funds directly from the insurance plan or government program, and the patient only pays the remaining balance to the practice
Percentage of patients
b. The practice bills the patient for the full cost of the visit then submits the claim on behalf of the patient
Percentage of patients
c. The practice bills the patient for the full cost of the visit and the patient is responsible to submit reimbursement claim themselves
Percentage of patients
Total percentage of patients
17. For the reporting period ending between April 1st, 2023 and March 31st, 2024, how did this practice process claims?
18. For patients for whom this practice had the ability to set its own service fees, does this practice typically charge the fees listed in the provincial or territorial fee guide?
19. For the reporting period ending between April 1st, 2023 and March 31st, 2024, what was the average time between time of booking and time of the appointment for an existing patient seeking non-emergency care ?
Exclude patients seeking emergency care.
20. On the last day of your fiscal period ending between April 1st, 2023 and March 31st, 2024, was this practice accepting new patients?
21. For the reporting period ending between April 1st, 2023 and March 31st, 2024, what was the average time between when a new patient contacted this practice (for non-urgent services) and the their first appointment?
Exclude new patients seeking emergency care.
22. For the reporting period ending between April 1st, 2023 and March 31st, 2024, on an average week, how many actual patient visits did this practice have?
Patient visit: An appointment where a patient sees a dentist or other oral health care providers for examination, diagnosis, or treatment.
Average week: A typical week during the specified reporting period. It should not include special events, unusual circumstances or statutory holidays.
Average number of patient visits per week
Exclude all cancellations.
23. For the reporting period ending between April 1st, 2023 and March 31st, 2024, during an average week, could this practice have accommodated additional patient visits?
Instructions: Please base your response on unfilled time slots and disregard appointments cancelled by patients.
Patient visit: An appointment where a patient sees a dentist or other oral health care providers for examination, diagnosis, or treatment.
Average week: A typical week during the specified reporting period. It should not include special events, unusual circumstances or statutory holidays.
24. For the reporting period ending between April 1st, 2023 and March 31st, 2024, what were the human-resources challenges or labour-related impacts for this practice?
Select all that apply.
Staffing and human resources challenges
OR
Labour-related impacts
OR
25. For the reporting period ending between April 1st, 2023 and March 31st, 2024, which of the following were operational challenges for this practice?
Select all that apply.
OR
26. Over the next 24 months, which of the following statements best describes the intention of this practice with respect to its practice operations?
27. Some patients are only covered under public dental care plans. Does this practice accept patients who are only covered under public dental care plans?
28. Rate your level of agreement or disagreement with the following statements regarding the Canadian Dental Care Plan (CDCP).
a. This practice received adequate information about participating, as providers, in the CDCP.
Strongly disagree
Disagree
Agree
Strongly agree
Don't know
b. This practice received adequate information about the eligibility criteria and the coverage offered by the CDCP.
Strongly disagree
Disagree
Agree
Strongly agree
Don't know
c. This practice knows where to go to get help with questions about CDCP.
Strongly disagree
Disagree
Agree
Strongly agree
Don't know
d. This practice intends to participate in the CDCP when patients become admissible.
Strongly disagree
Disagree
Agree
Strongly agree
Don't know
29. 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.
OR
30. Statistics Canada may need to contact the person who completed this questionnaire for further information.
Is the designated contact person for the business or organization the best person to contact?
31. How long did it take to complete this questionnaire?
Include the time spent gathering the necessary information.
32. Do you have any comments about this questionnaire?
This survey collects data on capital and repair expenditures in Canada. The information is used by Federal and Provincial government departments and agencies, trade associations, universities and international organizations for policy development and as a measure of regional economic activity.
Your information may also be used by Statistics Canada for other statistical and research purposes.
Your participation in this survey is required under the authority of the Statistics Act.
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.
Approved disclosure
Section 17 of the federal Statistics Act allows for the disclosure of certain information relating to an individual, business or organization. Statistics Canada will only disclose information where there is a demonstrated statistical need and for the public good, and when it will not harm individuals, organizations or businesses if data were disclosed. For the Capital and Repair Expenditures Survey, The Chief Statistician has authorized the release of data relating to carriers, public utilities and non-commercial institutions including, but not limited to, hospitals, libraries, educational institutions, federal government entities and individual provincial, territorial and municipal governments. These include capital and repair expenditure expenditures at the aggregate level.
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.esd-helpdesk-dse-bureaudedepannage.statcan@statcan.gc.ca or by fax at 613-951-6583.
For this survey, there are Section 12 agreements with the statistical agencies of Prince Edward Island, the Northwest Territories and Nunavut as well as Environment and Climate Change Canada, Infrastructure Canada, the Canada Energy Regulator, Natural Resources Canada and Sustainability Development Technology Canada.
For agreements with provincial and territorial government organizations, the shared data will be limited to information pertaining to business establishments located within the jurisdiction of the respective province or territory.
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.
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.
3. Verify or provide the current operational status of the business or organization identified by the legal and operating name above.
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
5. You indicated that is not the current main activity. Was this business or organization's main activity ever classified as: ?
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)
Reporting period information
1. What are the start and end dates of this organization's fiscal year for this survey?
Note: For this survey, the end date should fall between April 1, 2022 and March 31, 2023
Here are twelve common fiscal periods that fall within the targeted dates:
Here are other examples of fiscal periods that fall within the required dates:
Fiscal Year Start date:
Fiscal Year-End date:
2. What is the reason the reporting period does not cover a full year?
Select all that apply.
What are Capital Expenditures?
Capital Expenditures are the gross expenditures on fixed assets for use in the operations of your organization or for lease or rent to others. Gross expenditures are expenditures before deducting proceeds from disposals, and credits (capital grants, donations, government assistance and investment tax credits).
Fixed assets are also known as capital assets or property, plant and equipment. They are items with a useful life of more than one year and are not purchased for resale but rather for use in the entity's production of goods and services. Examples are buildings, vehicles, leasehold improvements, furniture and fixtures, machinery, and computer software.
Include:
Exclude:
How to Treat Leases
Include:
Exclude:
What are Repair Expenditures?
Non-capitalized repair and maintenance expenditures are that portion of current or operating expenditures charged against revenue in the year incurred and made for the purpose of keeping the stock of fixed assets in good working condition during the life originally intended.
Repair and maintenance allow such fixed assets to operate at output producing capacity during the asset life without undue amounts of down time (preventive function). A second purpose is the returning of any portion of the stock of fixed assets into a state of good working condition after any malfunctioning or reduced efficiency for whatever reason (curative function) short of replacement of such fixed assets or adding significantly to their life or productive efficiency.
Maintenance expenditures on buildings and other structures may include the routine care of assets such as janitorial services, snow removal and/or salting and sanding by the firm's own employees or persons outside the firm's employ. Maintenance expenditures on machinery and equipment may include oil change and lubrication of vehicles and machinery.
3. Throughout this questionnaire, please report financial information in thousands of Canadian dollars. For example, an amount of $763,880.25 should be reported as:
CAN$ '000 : $764,000
I will report in the format above
1. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were the organization's gross capital and repair expenditures for the following categories?
Include acquisitions, renovations, leasehold improvements, and additions to work in progress.
Exclude asset transfers and business acquisitions.
A) Gross capital expenditures, excluding land
Include:
How to Treat Leases
Include:
Exclude:
B) Land
Total should include all costs associated with the purchase of the land that are not amortized or depreciated. Improvements of land should be reported in Gross capital expenditures, excluding land.
C) Non-capitalized repair and maintenance expenditures
This represents the repair and maintenance of assets in contrast to the acquisition of assets or the renovation of assets.
Include:
D) Non-capitalized repair and maintenance expenditures for machinery and equipment
Include:
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| A) Gross capital expenditures, excluding land | |
| B) Land | |
| C) Non-capitalized repair and maintenance expenditures | |
| D) Of the amount reported for non-capitalized repair and maintenance expenditures, enter an amount representing machinery and equipment (include vehicles and office equipment) |
2. What is the total dollar value of your capital work in progress (buildings, other construction, machinery and equipment, software) at year end?
These capital costs should be reported as Capital Expenditures in the year that they occurred.
Work in Progress: Work in progress represents accumulated costs since the start of capital projects which are intended to be capitalized upon completion.
CAN$ '000
3. You have reported that no capital or repair expenditures were incurred for the operations covered by this questionnaire. Please indicate the reason.
Select all that apply.
4. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for residential construction?
Include housing and accommodation units with exclusive use of kitchen and bathroom facilities.
Exclude:
Residential Construction: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for residential structures (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees).
Include the housing portion of multi-purpose projects and of townsites.
Exclude buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizens residences) and associated expenditures on services.
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| Residential construction | |
| i. New Assets | |
| ii. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | |
| iii. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration |
5. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, did this organization have capital expenditures for non-residential construction?
Include acquisitions, renovations, leasehold improvements, and additions to work in progress.
Exclude asset transfers and business acquisitions.
Non-Residential Construction: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential building and engineering construction (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
Include:
New Assets: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately in this column.
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling and Restoration: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected Useful Life of Assets: Report the expected life of the asset in years.
6. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, which non-residential construction assets were acquired?
Include acquisitions, renovations, leasehold improvements, and additions to work in progress.
Exclude asset transfers and business acquisitions.
Select all that apply.
Construction structures should be classified to an asset according to its principal use unless it is a multi-purpose structure where we would like you to separate the components. The cost of any machinery and equipment which is an integral or built-in feature of the structure (e.g., elevators, heating equipment, sprinkler systems, environmental controls, intercom systems, etc.) should be reported as part of that structure as well as landscaping, associated parking lots, etc.
Industrial Building
Select all assets that apply.
Commercial Building
Select all assets that apply.
Institutional Building
Select all assets that apply.
Marine Engineering Infrastructure
Select all assets that apply.
Transportation Engineering Infrastructure
Select all assets that apply.
Waterworks Engineering Infrastructure
Select all assets that apply.
Sewage Engineering Infrastructure
Select all assets that apply.
Electric Power Engineering Infrastructure
Select all assets that apply.
Communication networks
Select all assets that apply.
Oil and Gas Engineering Construction
Select all assets that apply.
Mining Engineering Construction
Select all assets that apply.
Other Engineering Construction
Select all assets that apply.
7. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for industrial building construction?
Non-Residential Construction: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential building and engineering construction (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
Include:
New Assets: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately in this column.
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling and Restoration: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected Useful Life of Assets: Report the expected life of the asset in years. If you have purchased similar assets with varying expected useful lives, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) | |
|---|---|---|
| Manufacturing plants | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Industrial depots and service buildings | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Farm buildings and structures | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Other industrial sites and buildings | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total |
8. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for commercial building construction?
Non-Residential Construction: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential building and engineering construction (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
Include:
New Assets: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately in this column.
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling and Restoration: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected Useful Life of Assets: Report the expected life of the asset in years. If you have purchased similar assets with varying expected useful lives, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) | |
|---|---|---|
| Industrial laboratories, research and development centres | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Warehouses | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Service stations | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Office buildings | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Hotels | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Restaurants | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Shopping centres, plazas, malls and stores | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Theatres and halls | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Indoor recreational facilities | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Other collective dwellings | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Student residences | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Airports and other passenger terminals | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Communications buildings | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Sports facilities with spectator capacity | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Other commercial buildings, not elsewhere classified | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total |
9. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for institutional building construction?
Non-Residential Construction: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential building and engineering construction (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
Include:
New Assets: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately in this column.
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling and Restoration: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected Useful Life of Assets: Report the expected life of the asset in years. If you have purchased similar assets with varying expected useful lives, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) | |
|---|---|---|
| Schools, colleges, universities and other educational buildings | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Religious centres and memorial sites | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Hospitals | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Nursing homes, homes for the aged | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Health centres, clinics and other health care buildings | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Daycare centres | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Libraries | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Historical sites | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Museums | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Public security facilities | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Other institutional buildings, not elsewhere classified | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total |
10. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for marine engineering construction?
Non-Residential Construction: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential building and engineering construction (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
Include:
New Assets: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately in this column.
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling and Restoration: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected Useful Life of Assets: Report the expected life of the asset in years. If you have purchased similar assets with varying expected useful lives, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) | |
|---|---|---|
| Seaports | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Canals and waterways | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Marinas and harbours | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Other marine infrastructure | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total |
11. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for transportation engineering construction?
Non-Residential Construction: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential building and engineering construction (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
Include:
New Assets: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately in this column.
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling and Restoration: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected Useful Life of Assets: Report the expected life of the asset in years. If you have purchased similar assets with varying expected useful lives, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) | |
|---|---|---|
| Parking lots and garages | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Highway and road structures and networks | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Runways (include lighting) | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Railway lines | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Bridges | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Tunnels | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Other land transportation infrastructure, not elsewhere classified | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total |
12. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for waterworks engineering construction?
Non-Residential Construction: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential building and engineering construction (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
Include:
New Assets: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately in this column.
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling and Restoration: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected Useful Life of Assets: Report the expected life of the asset in years. If you have purchased similar assets with varying expected useful lives, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) | |
|---|---|---|
| Water filtration and treatment plants | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Water supply infrastructure | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total |
13. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for sewage engineering construction?
Non-Residential Construction: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential building and engineering construction (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
Include:
New Assets: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately in this column.
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling and Restoration: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected Useful Life of Assets: Report the expected life of the asset in years. If you have purchased similar assets with varying expected useful lives, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) | |
|---|---|---|
| Sewage and wastewater treatment plants | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Sewage collection and disposal infrastructure | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total |
14. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for electric power engineering construction?
Non-Residential Construction: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential building and engineering construction (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
Include:
New Assets: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately in this column.
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling and Restoration: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected Useful Life of Assets: Report the expected life of the asset in years. If you have purchased similar assets with varying expected useful lives, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) | |
|---|---|---|
| Steam production plants | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Nuclear production plants | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Hydro-electric power plants | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Other Power generating plants | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Power transmission networks | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Power distribution networks | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total |
15. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for communications networks construction?
Non-Residential Construction: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential building and engineering construction (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
Include:
New Assets: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately in this column.
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling and Restoration: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected Useful Life of Assets: Report the expected life of the asset in years. If you have purchased similar assets with varying expected useful lives, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) | |
|---|---|---|
| Telecommunications transmission cables and lines (except optical fibre) - (e.g., aerial, underground and submarine) | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Telecommunications transmission optical fibre cables (e.g., aerial, underground and submarine) | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Telecommunications transmission support structures - towers, poles, conduit | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Other communications networks | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total |
16. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for oil and gas engineering construction?
Non-Residential Construction: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential building and engineering construction (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
Include:
New Assets: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately in this column.
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling and Restoration: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected Useful Life of Assets: Report the expected life of the asset in years. If you have purchased similar assets with varying expected useful lives, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) | |
|---|---|---|
| Oil refineries | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Natural gas processing plants | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Pipelines | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Development drilling for oil and gas | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Production facilities in oil and gas extraction | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Enhanced recovery techniques for oil and gas | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Site development services for oil and gas fields | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Gas distribution systems (mains and services) and other oil and gas infrastructure | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total |
17. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for mining engineering construction?
Non-Residential Construction: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential building and engineering construction (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
Include:
For commissioning phase or start-up (pre-commercial operations) mining activities please exclude the capitalized operating costs.
New Assets: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately in this column.
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling and Restoration: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected Useful Life of Assets: Report the expected life of the asset in years. If you have purchased similar assets with varying expected useful lives, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) / (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 X 20) + (100 X 10) + (10 X 30)) / 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) | |
|---|---|---|
| Mine surface buildings (except for beneficiation) | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Mine buildings for beneficiation treatment of minerals | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Mine structures | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Tailing disposal systems settling ponds | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Mine-site development | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total |
18. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for other engineering construction?
Non-Residential Construction: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for non-residential building and engineering construction (on a contracted basis and/or by your own employees) whether for your own use or rent to others.
Include:
New Assets: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately in this column.
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling and Restoration: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected Useful Life of Assets: Report the expected life of the asset in years. If you have purchased similar assets with varying expected useful lives, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) | |
|---|---|---|
| Pollution abatement and control | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Outdoor recreational facilities | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Waste disposal facilities | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Irrigation networks | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Site remediation | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Reclaimed land | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Flood protection infrastructure | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Other engineering works, not elsewhere classified | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total |
19. Capital Expenditures for Non-Residential Construction
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| Industrial Building | |
| Total New Assets | |
| Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | |
| Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration) | |
| Commercial Building | |
| Total New Assets | |
| Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | |
| Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration) | |
| Institutional Building | |
| Total New Assets | |
| Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | |
| Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration) | |
| Marine Engineering Infrastructure | |
| Total New Assets | |
| Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | |
| Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration) | |
| Transportation Engineering Infrastructure | |
| Total New Assets | |
| Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | |
| Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration) | |
| Waterworks Engineering Infrastructure | |
| Total New Assets | |
| Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | |
| Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration) | |
| Sewage Engineering Infrastructure | |
| Total New Assets | |
| Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | |
| Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration) | |
| Electric Power Engineering Infrastructure | |
| Total New Assets | |
| Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | |
| Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration) | |
| Communication Networks | |
| Total New Assets | |
| Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | |
| Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration) | |
| Oil and Gas Engineering Construction | |
| Total New Assets | |
| Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | |
| Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration) | |
| Mining Engineering Construction | |
| Total New Assets | |
| Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | |
| Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration) | |
| Other Engineering Construction | |
| Total New Assets | |
| Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | |
| Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration) | |
| Total | |
| Total New Assets | |
| Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | |
| Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration) | |
| Total Used Assets | |
| Box A1 + A2 | |
| Box A1 + A2 | |
| Box A1 + A2 |
20. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, did this organization have capital expenditures for machinery and equipment?
Include renovations and acquisitions to work in progress.
Machinery and Equipment: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for machinery and equipment, whether for your own use or for lease or rent to others.
Include:
New Assets: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately in this column.
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling and Restoration: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected Useful Life of Assets: Report the expected life of the asset in years. If you have purchased similar assets with varying expected useful lives, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
21. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, which machinery and equipment assets were acquired?
Include renovations and acquisitions to work in progress.
Select all that apply.
Machinery and Equipment: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for machinery and equipment, whether for your own use or for lease or rent to others.
Include:
Medium and Heavy Trucks, Buses and Other Motor Vehicles
Select all assets that apply.
Passenger Cars and Light Trucks
Select all assets that apply.
Other Transportation Equipment
Select all assets that apply.
Processing Equipment
Select all assets that apply.
Computers and Office Equipment
Select all assets that apply.
Telecommunications, Cable and Broadcasting Equipment
Select all assets that apply.
Commercial and Service Industry Machinery and Equipment
Select all assets that apply.
Other Industrial Machinery and Equipment
Select all assets that apply.
Medical, Scientific and Technical Instruments and equipment
Select all assets that apply.
Other Machinery and Equipment
Select all assets that apply.
22. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for medium and heavy trucks, buses and other motor vehicles?
Machinery and Equipment: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for machinery and equipment, whether for your own use or for lease or rent to others.
Include:
New Assets: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately in this column.
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling and Restoration: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected Useful Life of Assets: Report the expected life of the asset in years. If you have purchased similar assets with varying expected useful lives, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) | |
|---|---|---|
| Medium and heavy-duty trucks | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Buses | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Freight and utility trailers | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Special-purpose vehicles | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Materials handling trucks and tractors | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Other motor vehicles | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total |
23. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for passenger cars and light trucks?
Machinery and Equipment: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for machinery and equipment, whether for your own use or for lease or rent to others.
Include:
New Assets: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately in this column.
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling and Restoration: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected Useful Life of Assets: Report the expected life of the asset in years. If you have purchased similar assets with varying expected useful lives, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) | |
|---|---|---|
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total |
24. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for other transportation equipment?
Machinery and Equipment: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for machinery and equipment, whether for your own use or for lease or rent to others.
Include:
New Assets: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately in this column.
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling and Restoration: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected Useful Life of Assets: Report the expected life of the asset in years. If you have purchased similar assets with varying expected useful lives, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) | |
|---|---|---|
| Locomotives, railway rolling stock, and rapid transit equipment | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Civilian aircraft | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Non-military ships, barges and platforms | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Boats and personal watercraft | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Other transportation equipment | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total |
25. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for processing equipment?
Machinery and Equipment: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for machinery and equipment, whether for your own use or for lease or rent to others.
Include:
New Assets: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately in this column.
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling and Restoration: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected Useful Life of Assets: Report the expected life of the asset in years. If you have purchased similar assets with varying expected useful lives, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) | |
|---|---|---|
| Water treatment equipment | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Filters and strainers for fluids and fluid power systems | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Packing, packaging, and bottling machinery | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Mineral crushing, screening, processing and beneficiation machinery and equipment | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Metalworking machinery | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Industrial moulds, special dies, and patterns | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Other industry-specific manufacturing machinery, not elsewhere classified | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total |
26. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for computers and office equipment?
Machinery and Equipment: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for machinery and equipment, whether for your own use or for lease or rent to others.
Include:
New Assets: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately in this column.
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling and Restoration: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected Useful Life of Assets: Report the expected life of the asset in years. If you have purchased similar assets with varying expected useful lives, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) | |
|---|---|---|
| Computers and computer peripheral equipment | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines (except computers and peripherals) | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Office furniture | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total |
27. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for telecommunications, cable and broadcasting equipment?
Machinery and Equipment: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for machinery and equipment, whether for your own use or for lease or rent to others.
Include:
New Assets: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately in this column.
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling and Restoration: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected Useful Life of Assets: Report the expected life of the asset in years. If you have purchased similar assets with varying expected useful lives, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) | |
|---|---|---|
| Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Navigational and guidance instruments | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Telephone and data communications equipment | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Televisions and other audio and video equipment | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Other communication equipment | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total |
28. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for commercial and service industry machinery and equipment?
Machinery and Equipment: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for machinery and equipment, whether for your own use or for lease or rent to others.
Include:
New Assets: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately in this column.
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling and Restoration: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected Useful Life of Assets: Report the expected life of the asset in years. If you have purchased similar assets with varying expected useful lives, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) | |
|---|---|---|
| Commercial cooking and food-warming equipment | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Commercial and service industry machinery and equipment, not elsewhere classified | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total |
29. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for other industrial machinery and equipment?
Machinery and Equipment: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for machinery and equipment, whether for your own use or for lease or rent to others.
Include:
For commissioning phase or start-up (pre-commercial operations) mining activities please exclude the capitalized operating costs.
New Assets: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately in this column.
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling and Restoration: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected Useful Life of Assets: Report the expected life of the asset in years. If you have purchased similar assets with varying expected useful lives, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A X Years of Asset A) + (Asset B X Years of Asset B) + (Asset C X Years of Asset C)) / (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 X 20) + (100 X 10) + (10 X 30)) / 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) | |
|---|---|---|
| Heavy-gauge metal containers (including intermodal) | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Hand tools and power hand tools (except welding and soldering equipment) | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Logging machinery and equipment | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Rock drilling machinery and equipment | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Other mining and quarrying machinery and equipment, not elsewhere classified | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Oil and gas field production machinery and equipment | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Construction machinery and equipment | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Nuclear reactor steam supply systems | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Welding and soldering equipment | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Industrial furnaces and ovens, and electric industrial heating equipment | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Other materials handling equipment, conveyors, and elevators | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total |
30. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for medical, scientific and technical instruments and equipment?
Machinery and Equipment: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for machinery and equipment, whether for your own use or for lease or rent to others.
Include:
New Assets: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately in this column.
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling and Restoration: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected Useful Life of Assets: Report the expected life of the asset in years. If you have purchased similar assets with varying expected useful lives, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) | |
|---|---|---|
| Medical and laboratory equipment (except scientific instruments) | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Scientific and technical instruments (except electromedical and irradiation equipment) | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Other measuring, control, and scientific instruments (except electromedical and irradiation equipment) | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Medical, dental and personal safety supplies | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total |
31. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for other machinery and equipment?
Machinery and Equipment: Capital expenditures incurred during the reporting period for machinery and equipment, whether for your own use or for lease or rent to others.
Include:
New Assets: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately in this column.
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling and Restoration: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected Useful Life of Assets: Report the expected life of the asset in years. If you have purchased similar assets with varying expected useful lives, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) | |
|---|---|---|
| Institutional and other furniture, not elsewhere classified (including furniture frames) | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Engines (except gasoline and diesel engines for motor vehicles, and aircraft engines) and mechanical power transmission equipment | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Pumps and compressors | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Heating and cooling equipment (except household refrigerators and freezers) | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Power and distribution transformers | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Other transformers | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Military aircraft | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Military ships | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Military armoured vehicles | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Billboards | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Non-residential mobile buildings | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Electric motors and generators | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Switchgear, switchboards, relays, and industrial control apparatus | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Turbines, turbine generators, and turbine generator sets | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Boilers, metal tanks, industrial valves and seals | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Agricultural, lawn and garden machinery and equipment | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Instruments for measuring electricity | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Industrial and commercial fans, blowers and air purification equipment | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Appliances | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Unmanned aerial vehicles (drones) | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Partitions, shelving, lockers and other fixtures | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Batteries | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Sporting and athletic goods | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Other machinery and equipment | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total |
32. Capital Expenditures for Machinery and Equipment
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| Medium and Heavy Trucks, Buses and Other Motor Vehicles | |
| Total New Assets | |
| Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | |
| Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration) | |
| Passenger Cars and Light Trucks | |
| Total New Assets | |
| Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | |
| Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration) | |
| Other Transportation Equipment | |
| Total New Assets | |
| Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | |
| Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration) | |
| Processing Equipment | |
| Total New Assets | |
| Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | |
| Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration) | |
| Computers and Office Equipment | |
| Total New Assets | |
| Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | |
| Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration) | |
| Telecommunications, Cable and Broadcasting | |
| Total New Assets | |
| Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | |
| Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration) | |
| Commercial and Service Industry Machinery and Equipment | |
| Total New Assets | |
| Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | |
| Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration) | |
| Other Industrial Machinery and Equipment | |
| Total New Assets | |
| Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | |
| Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration) | |
| Medical, Scientific and Technical Instruments and equipment | |
| Total New Assets | |
| Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | |
| Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration) | |
| Other Machinery and Equipment | |
| Total New Assets | |
| Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | |
| Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration) | |
| Total | |
| Total New Assets | |
| Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | |
| Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration) | |
| Total Used Machinery | |
| Box A1 + A2 |
33. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, did this organization have capital expenditures for software?
34. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's expenditures for software?
New Assets: Report Capital Expenditures for acquisitions of new assets including the portion of work in progress for the current year. Include imports of used assets since they represent newly acquired assets for the Canadian economy.
Purchase of Used Canadian Assets: The object of our survey is to measure the acquisitions of new fixed assets separately from used fixed assets in the Canadian economy as a whole. This is because the acquisition of used assets does not increase the total inventory of fixed assets, it only transfers them within the Canadian economy. Report acquisition of used assets separately in this column.
Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling and Restoration: Report Capital Expenditures for existing assets being upgraded, renovated, retrofitted, refurbished, overhauled or restored.
Expected Useful Life of Assets: Report the expected life of the asset in years. If you have purchased similar assets with varying expected useful lives, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Expected useful life (years) | |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-packaged software | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total | ||
| Custom software | ||
| a. New Assets | ||
| b. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets | ||
| c. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration | ||
| Total |
35. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, did this organization have capital expenditures for oil and gas and mineral exploration?
36. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's expenditures for oil and gas and mineral exploration?
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| a. Exploration drilling for oil and gas | |
| b. Other oil and gas exploration | |
| c. Mineral exploration | |
| d. Total expenditures |
The next questions cover the capital and repair expenditures made by this organization in order to prevent, reduce or eliminate pollution and other forms of degradation of the environment while performing your production activity, i.e., within your organization. Expenditures made to restore the environment from a degraded state are included.
Exclude expenditures made to improve employee health, workplace safety, and site beautification. Please report all environmental protection or resources management expenditures whether or not they are in response to current or anticipated Canadian or international regulations, conventions or voluntary agreements.
37. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, did this organization have capital expenditures for environmental protection and resources management activities?
Environmental protection activities are:
Resources management activities are:
Environmental protection expenditures: all 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.
Include expenditures that this specific operation 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; 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.
38. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, for which of the following environmental protection and resources management activities did this organization have capital expenditures?
Select all that apply.
Solid waste management
Examples of related technologies:
Wastewater management
Examples of related technologies:
Air pollution management
Examples of related technologies:
Protection and remediation of soil, groundwater and surface water
Examples of related activities:
Heat and energy savings and management
Examples of related goods and technologies:
Production of renewable energy
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 and ocean 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.
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: systems and equipment for energy production from wave, tidal, and ocean thermal energy conversion systems.
Environmental protection activities
Solid waste management
Capital expenditures related to non-hazardous and hazardous solid waste collection, transport, treatment, storage, disposal, recycling, and composting, and activities related to measurement, control, and laboratories.
Exclude capital expenditures on sewage or wastewater management, and treatment of high-level radioactive waste.
Wastewater management
Capital 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. Include capital expenditures related to treatment of cooling water for disposal, installation of sewage infrastructure, expenditures related to the use, collection, treatment and disposal of sewage (including septic tanks), and activities related to measurement, control, and laboratories.
Exclude capital expenditures on the protection of groundwater from pollutant infiltration and the cleaning up of soil and water bodies after pollution.
Air pollution management
Capital expenditures related to air pollution prevention (i.e., the elimination of pollution at the source) and air pollution abatement and control (i.e., end-of-pipe processes), including monitoring.
e.g., scrubbers, air and off-gas treatments, low emitting burners, leak detection technologies
Exclude heat or energy savings and management, the purchase or lease of fuel efficient vehicles and equipment, the production of renewable or clean energy, the purchase of biofuels, biochemicals or biomaterials, and the purchase of carbon offset credits and carbon taxes.
Protection and remediation of soil, groundwater and surface water
Capital expenditures for the prevention of pollution infiltration, cleaning up of soil and water bodies, protection of soil from erosion, salinization and physical degradation, monitoring, and site reclamation and decommissioning. Include decommissioning expenditures incurred in the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD even if the site closed before this period.
Exclude capital expenditures on wastewater management.
Protection of biodiversity and habitat
Capital 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 monitoring.
Noise and vibration abatement
Capital expenditures related to the control, reduction and abatement of industrial and transport noise and vibration related to the activities of this organization.
Exclude the abatement of noise and vibration for the purpose of workplace protection.
Protection against radiation
Capital expenditures for the reduction or elimination of the negative consequences of high-level radiation, including the handling, transportation and treatment of high-level radioactive waste - that is, waste that requires shielding during normal handling and transportation because of its high radionuclide content.
Exclude the management of low-level radioactive waste, and the protection against radiation for the purpose of workplace protection.
Other environmental protection activities
Capital expenditures related to other initiatives not listed above. Report imputed interest on funds held in trust against future environmental liabilities.
Exclude capital expenditures related to research and development, to heat or energy savings and management, the purchase or lease of fuel efficient vehicles and transportation goods, the production of renewable or clean energy, and the purchase of biofuels, biochemicals or biomaterials.
Resources management activities
Heat and energy savings and management
Capital expenditures related to minimizing the intake of energy through in-process modifications as well as the minimisation of heat and energy losses. This includes in-process modifications, insulation activities, energy recovery, monitoring related to energy saving, and lighting upgrades.
Use of fuel efficient vehicles and transportation goods or technologies
Capital expenditures related to the purchase or the lease of electric and hybrid vehicles, vehicles using alternative fuels, alternative fuel retrofits on existing vehicles, and low-rolling resistance tires.
Production of nuclear energy, whether for sale or own use
Capital expenditures related to the production of nuclear power.
Production of energy from renewable sources, whether for sale or own use
Capital expenditures related to the production of electricity or heat from renewable sources.
e.g., wind, geothermal, hydro, solar, and waste to energy
39. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for each environmental protection and resources management activity?
When precise figures are not available, provide your best estimate.
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| Environmental protection activity | |
| Solid waste management | |
| Wastewater management | |
| Air pollution management | |
| Protection and remediation of soil, groundwater and surface water | |
| Protection of biodiversity and habitat | |
| Noise and vibration abatement | |
| Protection against radiation | |
| Other environmental protection activities | |
| Resources management activity | |
| Heat and energy savings and management | |
| Use of fuel efficient vehicles and transportation goods or technologies | |
| Production of nuclear energy, whether for sale or own use | |
| Production of energy from renewable sources, whether for sale or own use |
40. Which of the following were drivers to the adoption of new or significantly improved clean technologies, systems or equipment for this organization during the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD.
Select all that apply.
41. Which of the following were obstacles to the adoption of new or significantly improved clean technologies, systems or equipment for this organization during the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD.
Select all that apply.
42. Please provide the source of funding breakdown of the capital expenditures reported earlier in the survey.
Government grants are unconditional transfer payments that governments provide for activities that meet eligibility criteria set by a funding program. Government contributions are conditional transfer payments that governments provide (recipients need to meet certain conditions and the government can audit the recipients' use of funding).
Note: Sum of a to d should be equal to the total of capital expenditures reported for construction and machinery and equipment previously in the survey.
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| a. Municipal or regional government grants, contributions | |
| b. Provincial and territorial government grants, contributions | |
| c. Federal government grants, contributions | |
| d. Private, internal and other sources of funding |
43. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, were any internal costs included in the reported capital and repair expenditures?
Internal construction or development costs (such as material and labour) that are capitalized as part of the asset costs (such as own employee installation or erection of fixed assets, systems and software development staff).
Include all materials and supplies provided free to contractors and all architects, engineering and consultants fees and similar services.
44. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, please provide details on the cost of own account (internal costs) imputed to fixed assets.
Salaries and Wages: Show the total value of salaries and wages paid to your employees. Salaries and wages are gross earnings before deductions such as income tax and include incentive bonuses and vacation pay but exclude fringe benefits.
Materials and Supplies: Report total cost of materials and supplies used by your own employees and those provided free to contractors relating to the expenditures reported.
Other Charges: Examples of other charges are insurance, power, telephone and also architectural, legal, and engineering fees considered to be applicable to the expenditures reported.
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| Non-residential construction (such as site preparation by own employees, internal pre-construction planning costs) | |
| i. Salaries and Wages | |
| ii. Materials and Supplies | |
| iii. Other Charges | |
| Total - Value of Own account work | |
| Non-capitalized repair and maintenance construction | |
| i. Salaries and Wages | |
| ii. Materials and Supplies | |
| iii. Other Charges | |
| Total - Value of Own account work | |
| Machinery and equipment capital expenditures (e.g., ship built for own-use, upgrades to vehicles by own employees, capitalized tooling by own employees, etc.) | |
| i. Salaries and Wages | |
| ii. Materials and Supplies | |
| iii. Other Charges | |
| Total - Value of Own account work | |
| Non-capitalized machinery and equipment repair and maintenance expenses | |
| i. Salaries and Wages | |
| ii. Materials and Supplies | |
| iii. Other Charges | |
| Total - Value of Own account work | |
| Software development capital expenditures (internal development for internal use) | |
| i. Salaries and Wages | |
| ii. Materials and Supplies | |
| iii. Other Charges | |
| Total - Value of Own account work |
45. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, did this organization dispose or sell any fixed assets?
46. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, which assets were disposed of or sold?
Select all that apply.
Land
Residential construction
Industrial Building
Select all assets that apply.
Commercial Building
Select all assets that apply.
Institutional Building
Select all assets that apply.
Marine Engineering Infrastructure
Select all assets that apply.
Transportation Engineering Infrastructure
Select all assets that apply.
Waterworks Engineering Infrastructure
Select all assets that apply.
Sewage Engineering Infrastructure
Select all assets that apply.
Electric Power Engineering Infrastructure
Select all assets that apply.
Communication Networks
Select all assets that apply.
Oil and Gas Engineering Construction
Select all assets that apply.
Mining Engineering Construction
Select all assets that apply.
Other Engineering Construction
Select all assets that apply.
Medium and Heavy Trucks, Buses and Other Motor Vehicles
Select all assets that apply.
Passenger Cars and Light Trucks
Select all assets that apply.
Other Transportation Equipment
Select all assets that apply.
Processing Equipment
Select all assets that apply.
Computers and Office Equipment
Select all assets that apply.
Telecommunications, Cable and Broadcasting Equipment
Select all assets that apply.
Commercial and Service Industry Machinery and Equipment
Select all assets that apply.
Other Industrial Machinery and Equipment
Select all assets that apply.
Medical, Scientific and Technical Instruments and equipment
Select all assets that apply.
Other Machinery and Equipment
Select all assets that apply.
Software
Select all assets that apply.
47. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were the selling price and gross book value of the disposed or sold land?
Selling Price: The total value, or the sales of fixed assets which were disposed of or sold, even if traded in for credit in the acquisition or purchase of new fixed assets. When land and buildings are sold together, please report the selling price of the land separately, along with other land sales.
Gross Book Value: This value should represent total capital expenditures for an asset, at and since the time of original construction or purchase, including all subsequent capital expenditures for the purpose of modernization, expansion, etc. Any subsidies received should not be subtracted. For land transfers, please report the market value in the gross book value section.
| CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|
| Land | |
| a. Selling Price | |
| b. Gross Book Value |
48. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold residential construction?
Selling Price: The total value, or the sales of fixed assets which were disposed of or sold, even if traded in for credit in the acquisition or purchase of new fixed assets. When land and buildings are sold together, please report the selling price of the land separately, along with other land sales.
Gross Book Value: This value should represent total capital expenditures for an asset, at and since the time of original construction or purchase, including all subsequent capital expenditures for the purpose of modernization, expansion, etc. Any subsidies received should not be subtracted.
Age: Report the age of the fixed asset at the time of disposal. If you have disposed of or sold similar assets of varying ages, report them separately or combine the data and provide a weighted average for the ages, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Years | |
|---|---|---|
| Residential construction | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age |
49. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for industrial building construction?
Selling Price: The total value, or the sales of fixed assets which were disposed of or sold, even if traded in for credit in the acquisition or purchase of new fixed assets. When land and buildings are sold together, please report the selling price of the land separately, along with other land sales.
Gross Book Value: This value should represent total capital expenditures for an asset, at and since the time of original construction or purchase, including all subsequent capital expenditures for the purpose of modernization, expansion, etc. Any subsidies received should not be subtracted.
Age: Report the age of the fixed asset at the time of disposal. If you have disposed of or sold similar assets of varying ages, report them separately or combine the data and provide a weighted average for the ages, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Years | |
|---|---|---|
| Manufacturing plants | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Industrial depots and service buildings | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Farm buildings and structures | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Other industrial sites and buildings | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age |
50. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for commercial building construction?
Selling Price: The total value, or the sales of fixed assets which were disposed of or sold, even if traded in for credit in the acquisition or purchase of new fixed assets. When land and buildings are sold together, please report the selling price of the land separately, along with other land sales.
Gross Book Value: This value should represent total capital expenditures for an asset, at and since the time of original construction or purchase, including all subsequent capital expenditures for the purpose of modernization, expansion, etc. Any subsidies received should not be subtracted.
Age: Report the age of the fixed asset at the time of disposal. If you have disposed of or sold similar assets of varying ages, report them separately or combine the data and provide a weighted average for the ages, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Years | |
|---|---|---|
| Industrial laboratories, research and development centres | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Warehouses | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Service stations | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Office buildings | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Hotels | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Restaurants | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Shopping centres, plazas, malls and stores | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Theatres and halls | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Indoor recreational facilities | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Other collective dwellings | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Student residences | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Airports and other passenger terminals | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Communications buildings | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Sports facilities with spectator capacity | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Other commercial properties, not elsewhere classified | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age |
51. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for institutional building construction?
Selling Price: The total value, or the sales of fixed assets which were disposed of or sold, even if traded in for credit in the acquisition or purchase of new fixed assets. When land and buildings are sold together, please report the selling price of the land separately, along with other land sales.
Gross Book Value: This value should represent total capital expenditures for an asset, at and since the time of original construction or purchase, including all subsequent capital expenditures for the purpose of modernization, expansion, etc. Any subsidies received should not be subtracted.
Age: Report the age of the fixed asset at the time of disposal. If you have disposed of or sold similar assets of varying ages, report them separately or combine the data and provide a weighted average for the ages, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Years | |
|---|---|---|
| Schools, colleges, universities and other educational buildings | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Religious centres and memorial sites | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Hospitals | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Nursing homes, homes for the aged | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Health centres, clinics and other health care buildings | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Daycare centres | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Libraries | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Historical sites | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Museums | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Public security facilities | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Other institutional buildings, not elsewhere classified | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age |
52. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for marine engineering construction?
Selling Price: The total value, or the sales of fixed assets which were disposed of or sold, even if traded in for credit in the acquisition or purchase of new fixed assets. When land and buildings are sold together, please report the selling price of the land separately, along with other land sales.
Gross Book Value: This value should represent total capital expenditures for an asset, at and since the time of original construction or purchase, including all subsequent capital expenditures for the purpose of modernization, expansion, etc. Any subsidies received should not be subtracted.
Age: Report the age of the fixed asset at the time of disposal. If you have disposed of or sold similar assets of varying ages, report them separately or combine the data and provide a weighted average for the ages, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Years | |
|---|---|---|
| Seaports | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Canals and waterways | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Marinas and harbours | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Other marine engineering infrastructure | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age |
53. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for transportation engineering construction?
Selling Price: The total value, or the sales of fixed assets which were disposed of or sold, even if traded in for credit in the acquisition or purchase of new fixed assets. When land and buildings are sold together, please report the selling price of the land separately, along with other land sales.
Gross Book Value: This value should represent total capital expenditures for an asset, at and since the time of original construction or purchase, including all subsequent capital expenditures for the purpose of modernization, expansion, etc. Any subsidies received should not be subtracted.
Age: Report the age of the fixed asset at the time of disposal. If you have disposed of or sold similar assets of varying ages, report them separately or combine the data and provide a weighted average for the ages, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Years | |
|---|---|---|
| Parking lots and garages | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Highway and road structures and networks | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Runways (include lighting) | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Railway lines | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Bridges | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Tunnels | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Other land transportation infrastructure, not elsewhere classified | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age |
54. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for waterworks engineering construction?
Selling Price: The total value, or the sales of fixed assets which were disposed of or sold, even if traded in for credit in the acquisition or purchase of new fixed assets. When land and buildings are sold together, please report the selling price of the land separately, along with other land sales.
Gross Book Value: This value should represent total capital expenditures for an asset, at and since the time of original construction or purchase, including all subsequent capital expenditures for the purpose of modernization, expansion, etc. Any subsidies received should not be subtracted.
Age: Report the age of the fixed asset at the time of disposal. If you have disposed of or sold similar assets of varying ages, report them separately or combine the data and provide a weighted average for the ages, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Years | |
|---|---|---|
| Water filtration and treatment plants | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Water supply infrastructure | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age |
55. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for sewage engineering construction?
Selling Price: The total value, or the sales of fixed assets which were disposed of or sold, even if traded in for credit in the acquisition or purchase of new fixed assets. When land and buildings are sold together, please report the selling price of the land separately, along with other land sales.
Gross Book Value: This value should represent total capital expenditures for an asset, at and since the time of original construction or purchase, including all subsequent capital expenditures for the purpose of modernization, expansion, etc. Any subsidies received should not be subtracted.
Age: Report the age of the fixed asset at the time of disposal. If you have disposed of or sold similar assets of varying ages, report them separately or combine the data and provide a weighted average for the ages, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Years | |
|---|---|---|
| Sewage and wastewater treatment plants | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Sewage collection and disposal infrastructure | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age |
56. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for electric power engineering construction?
Selling Price: The total value, or the sales of fixed assets which were disposed of or sold, even if traded in for credit in the acquisition or purchase of new fixed assets. When land and buildings are sold together, please report the selling price of the land separately, along with other land sales.
Gross Book Value: This value should represent total capital expenditures for an asset, at and since the time of original construction or purchase, including all subsequent capital expenditures for the purpose of modernization, expansion, etc. Any subsidies received should not be subtracted.
Age: Report the age of the fixed asset at the time of disposal. If you have disposed of or sold similar assets of varying ages, report them separately or combine the data and provide a weighted average for the ages, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Years | |
|---|---|---|
| Steam production plants | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Nuclear production plants | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Hydro-electric power plants | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Other power generating plants (wind, solar, biomass) | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Power transmission networks | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Power distribution networks | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age |
57. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for communication networks construction?
Selling Price: The total value, or the sales of fixed assets which were disposed of or sold, even if traded in for credit in the acquisition or purchase of new fixed assets. When land and buildings are sold together, please report the selling price of the land separately, along with other land sales.
Gross Book Value: This value should represent total capital expenditures for an asset, at and since the time of original construction or purchase, including all subsequent capital expenditures for the purpose of modernization, expansion, etc. Any subsidies received should not be subtracted.
Age: Report the age of the fixed asset at the time of disposal. If you have disposed of or sold similar assets of varying ages, report them separately or combine the data and provide a weighted average for the ages, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Years | |
|---|---|---|
| Telecommunications transmission cables and lines (except optical fibre) - (e.g., aerial, underground and submarine) | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Telecommunications transmission optical fibre cables (e.g., aerial, underground and submarine) | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Telecommunications transmission support structures - towers, poles, conduit | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Other communications networks | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age |
58. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for oil and gas engineering construction?
Selling Price: The total value, or the sales of fixed assets which were disposed of or sold, even if traded in for credit in the acquisition or purchase of new fixed assets. When land and buildings are sold together, please report the selling price of the land separately, along with other land sales.
Gross Book Value: This value should represent total capital expenditures for an asset, at and since the time of original construction or purchase, including all subsequent capital expenditures for the purpose of modernization, expansion, etc. Any subsidies received should not be subtracted.
Age: Report the age of the fixed asset at the time of disposal. If you have disposed of or sold similar assets of varying ages, report them separately or combine the data and provide a weighted average for the ages, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Years | |
|---|---|---|
| Oil refineries | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Natural gas processing plants | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Pipelines | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Development drilling for oil and gas | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Production facilities in oil and gas extraction | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Enhanced recovery projects | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Site development and other pre-mining costs | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Gas distribution systems (mains and services) and other oil and gas infrastructure | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age |
59. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for mining engineering construction?
Selling Price: The total value, or the sales of fixed assets which were disposed of or sold, even if traded in for credit in the acquisition or purchase of new fixed assets. When land and buildings are sold together, please report the selling price of the land separately, along with other land sales.
Gross Book Value: This value should represent total capital expenditures for an asset, at and since the time of original construction or purchase, including all subsequent capital expenditures for the purpose of modernization, expansion, etc. Any subsidies received should not be subtracted.
Age: Report the age of the fixed asset at the time of disposal. If you have disposed of or sold similar assets of varying ages, report them separately or combine the data and provide a weighted average for the ages, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Years | |
|---|---|---|
| Mine surface buildings (except for beneficiation) | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Mine buildings for beneficiation treatment of minerals | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Mine structures | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Tailing disposal systems settling ponds | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Mine-site development | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age |
60. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for other engineering construction?
Selling Price: The total value, or the sales of fixed assets which were disposed of or sold, even if traded in for credit in the acquisition or purchase of new fixed assets. When land and buildings are sold together, please report the selling price of the land separately, along with other land sales.
Gross Book Value: This value should represent total capital expenditures for an asset, at and since the time of original construction or purchase, including all subsequent capital expenditures for the purpose of modernization, expansion, etc. Any subsidies received should not be subtracted.
Age: Report the age of the fixed asset at the time of disposal. If you have disposed of or sold similar assets of varying ages, report them separately or combine the data and provide a weighted average for the ages, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Years | |
|---|---|---|
| Pollution abatement and control | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Outdoor recreational facilities | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Waste disposal facilities | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Irrigation networks | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Site remediation | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Reclaimed land | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Flood protection infrastructure | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Other engineering works, not elsewhere classified | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age |
61. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for medium and heavy trucks, buses and other motor vehicles?
Selling Price: The total value, or the sales of fixed assets which were disposed of or sold, even if traded in for credit in the acquisition or purchase of new fixed assets. When land and buildings are sold together, please report the selling price of the land separately, along with other land sales.
Gross Book Value: This value should represent total capital expenditures for an asset, at and since the time of original construction or purchase, including all subsequent capital expenditures for the purpose of modernization, expansion, etc. Any subsidies received should not be subtracted.
Age: Report the age of the fixed asset at the time of disposal. If you have disposed of or sold similar assets of varying ages, report them separately or combine the data and provide a weighted average for the ages, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Years | |
|---|---|---|
| Medium and heavy-duty trucks | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Buses | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Freight and utility trailers | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Special-purpose vehicles | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Materials handling trucks and tractors | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Other motor vehicles | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age |
62. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for passenger cars and light trucks?
Selling Price: The total value, or the sales of fixed assets which were disposed of or sold, even if traded in for credit in the acquisition or purchase of new fixed assets. When land and buildings are sold together, please report the selling price of the land separately, along with other land sales.
Gross Book Value: This value should represent total capital expenditures for an asset, at and since the time of original construction or purchase, including all subsequent capital expenditures for the purpose of modernization, expansion, etc. Any subsidies received should not be subtracted.
Age: Report the age of the fixed asset at the time of disposal. If you have disposed of or sold similar assets of varying ages, report them separately or combine the data and provide a weighted average for the ages, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Years | |
|---|---|---|
| Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age |
63. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for other transportation equipment?
Selling Price: The total value, or the sales of fixed assets which were disposed of or sold, even if traded in for credit in the acquisition or purchase of new fixed assets. When land and buildings are sold together, please report the selling price of the land separately, along with other land sales.
Gross Book Value: This value should represent total capital expenditures for an asset, at and since the time of original construction or purchase, including all subsequent capital expenditures for the purpose of modernization, expansion, etc. Any subsidies received should not be subtracted.
Age: Report the age of the fixed asset at the time of disposal. If you have disposed of or sold similar assets of varying ages, report them separately or combine the data and provide a weighted average for the ages, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Years | |
|---|---|---|
| Locomotives, railway rolling stock, and rapid transit equipment | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Civilian aircraft | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Non-military ships, barges and platforms | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Boats and personal watercraft | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Other transportation equipment | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age |
64. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for processing equipment?
Selling Price: The total value, or the sales of fixed assets which were disposed of or sold, even if traded in for credit in the acquisition or purchase of new fixed assets. When land and buildings are sold together, please report the selling price of the land separately, along with other land sales.
Gross Book Value: This value should represent total capital expenditures for an asset, at and since the time of original construction or purchase, including all subsequent capital expenditures for the purpose of modernization, expansion, etc. Any subsidies received should not be subtracted.
Age: Report the age of the fixed asset at the time of disposal. If you have disposed of or sold similar assets of varying ages, report them separately or combine the data and provide a weighted average for the ages, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Years | |
|---|---|---|
| Water treatment equipment | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Filters and strainers for fluids and fluid power systems | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Packing, packaging, and bottling machinery | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Mineral crushing, screening, processing and beneficiation machinery and equipment | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Metalworking machinery | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Industrial moulds, special dies, and patterns | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Other industry-specific manufacturing machinery, not elsewhere classified | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age |
65. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for computers and office equipment?
Selling Price: The total value, or the sales of fixed assets which were disposed of or sold, even if traded in for credit in the acquisition or purchase of new fixed assets. When land and buildings are sold together, please report the selling price of the land separately, along with other land sales.
Gross Book Value: This value should represent total capital expenditures for an asset, at and since the time of original construction or purchase, including all subsequent capital expenditures for the purpose of modernization, expansion, etc. Any subsidies received should not be subtracted.
Age: Report the age of the fixed asset at the time of disposal. If you have disposed of or sold similar assets of varying ages, report them separately or combine the data and provide a weighted average for the ages, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Years | |
|---|---|---|
| Computers and computer peripheral equipment | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines (except computers and peripherals) | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Office furniture | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age |
66. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for telecommunications, cable and broadcasting equipment?
Selling Price: The total value, or the sales of fixed assets which were disposed of or sold, even if traded in for credit in the acquisition or purchase of new fixed assets. When land and buildings are sold together, please report the selling price of the land separately, along with other land sales.
Gross Book Value: This value should represent total capital expenditures for an asset, at and since the time of original construction or purchase, including all subsequent capital expenditures for the purpose of modernization, expansion, etc. Any subsidies received should not be subtracted.
Age: Report the age of the fixed asset at the time of disposal. If you have disposed of or sold similar assets of varying ages, report them separately or combine the data and provide a weighted average for the ages, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Years | |
|---|---|---|
| Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Navigational and guidance instruments | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Telephone and data communications equipment | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Televisions and other audio and video equipment | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Other communication equipment | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age |
67. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for commercial and service industry machinery and equipment?
Selling Price: The total value, or the sales of fixed assets which were disposed of or sold, even if traded in for credit in the acquisition or purchase of new fixed assets. When land and buildings are sold together, please report the selling price of the land separately, along with other land sales.
Gross Book Value: This value should represent total capital expenditures for an asset, at and since the time of original construction or purchase, including all subsequent capital expenditures for the purpose of modernization, expansion, etc. Any subsidies received should not be subtracted.
Age: Report the age of the fixed asset at the time of disposal. If you have disposed of or sold similar assets of varying ages, report them separately or combine the data and provide a weighted average for the ages, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Years | |
|---|---|---|
| Commercial cooking and food-warming equipment | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Commercial and service industry machinery and equipment, not elsewhere classified | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age |
68. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for other industrial machinery and equipment?
Selling Price: The total value, or the sales of fixed assets which were disposed of or sold, even if traded in for credit in the acquisition or purchase of new fixed assets. When land and buildings are sold together, please report the selling price of the land separately, along with other land sales.
Gross Book Value: This value should represent total capital expenditures for an asset, at and since the time of original construction or purchase, including all subsequent capital expenditures for the purpose of modernization, expansion, etc. Any subsidies received should not be subtracted.
Age: Report the age of the fixed asset at the time of disposal. If you have disposed of or sold similar assets of varying ages, report them separately or combine the data and provide a weighted average for the ages, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Years | |
|---|---|---|
| Heavy-gauge metal containers (including intermodal) | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Hand tools and power hand tools (except welding and soldering equipment) | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Logging machinery and equipment | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Rock drilling machinery and equipment | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Other mining and quarrying machinery and equipment, not elsewhere classified | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Oil and gas field production machinery and equipment | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Construction machinery and equipment | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Nuclear reactor steam supply systems | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Welding and soldering equipment | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Industrial furnaces and ovens, and electric industrial heating equipment | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Other materials handling equipment, conveyors, and elevators | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age |
69. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for medical, scientific and technical instruments and equipment?
Selling Price: The total value, or the sales of fixed assets which were disposed of or sold, even if traded in for credit in the acquisition or purchase of new fixed assets. When land and buildings are sold together, please report the selling price of the land separately, along with other land sales.
Gross Book Value: This value should represent total capital expenditures for an asset, at and since the time of original construction or purchase, including all subsequent capital expenditures for the purpose of modernization, expansion, etc. Any subsidies received should not be subtracted.
Age: Report the age of the fixed asset at the time of disposal. If you have disposed of or sold similar assets of varying ages, report them separately or combine the data and provide a weighted average for the ages, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Years | |
|---|---|---|
| Medical and laboratory equipment (except scientific instruments) | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Scientific and technical instruments (except electromedical and irradiation equipment) | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Other measuring, control, and scientific instruments (except electromedical and irradiation equipment) | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Medical, dental and personal safety supplies | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age |
70. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for other machinery and equipment?
Selling Price: The total value, or the sales of fixed assets which were disposed of or sold, even if traded in for credit in the acquisition or purchase of new fixed assets. When land and buildings are sold together, please report the selling price of the land separately, along with other land sales.
Gross Book Value: This value should represent total capital expenditures for an asset, at and since the time of original construction or purchase, including all subsequent capital expenditures for the purpose of modernization, expansion, etc. Any subsidies received should not be subtracted.
Age: Report the age of the fixed asset at the time of disposal. If you have disposed of or sold similar assets of varying ages, report them separately or combine the data and provide a weighted average for the ages, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Years | |
|---|---|---|
| Institutional and other furniture, not elsewhere classified (including furniture frames) | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Engines (except gasoline and diesel engines for motor vehicles, and aircraft engines) and mechanical power transmission equipment | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Pumps and compressors | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Heating and cooling equipment (except household refrigerators and freezers) | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Power and distribution transformers | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Other transformers | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Military aircraft | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Military ships | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Military armoured vehicles | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Billboards | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Non-residential mobile buildings | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Waste and scrap of iron and steel | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Waste and scrap of aluminum and aluminum alloy | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Waste and scrap of other non-ferrous metals | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Electric motors and generators | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Switchgear, switchboards, relays, and industrial control apparatus | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Turbines, turbine generators, and turbine generator sets | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Boilers, metal tanks, industrial valves and seals | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Agricultural, lawn and garden machinery and equipment | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Instruments for measuring electricity | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Industrial and commercial fans, blowers and air purification equipment | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Appliances | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Unmanned aerial vehicles (drones) | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Partitions, shelving, lockers and other fixtures | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Batteries | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Sporting and athletic goods | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Other machinery and equipment | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age |
71. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were the selling price, gross book value and age of the disposed or sold assets for software?
Selling Price: The total value, or the sales of fixed assets which were disposed of or sold, even if traded in for credit in the acquisition or purchase of new fixed assets. When land and buildings are sold together, please report the selling price of the land separately, along with other land sales.
Gross Book Value: This value should represent total capital expenditures for an asset, at and since the time of original construction or purchase, including all subsequent capital expenditures for the purpose of modernization, expansion, etc. Any subsidies received should not be subtracted.
Age: Report the age of the fixed asset at the time of disposal. If you have disposed of or sold similar assets of varying ages, report them separately or combine the data and provide a weighted average for the ages, please combine the data and provide a weighted average for the number of years.
Example of how to calculate a weighted average for years:
Years = ((Asset A × Years of Asset A) + (Asset B × Years of Asset B) + (Asset C × Years of Asset C)) ÷ (Total Capital Expenditures)
Years = ((1000 × 20) + (100 × 10) + (10 × 30)) ÷ 1110
Years = 19
If it is not possible to provide the weighted average, please provide the useful life for the asset which had the largest acquisition cost.
| CAN$ '000 | Years | |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-Packaged Software | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age | ||
| Custom software | ||
| a. Selling Price | ||
| b. Gross Book Value | ||
| c. Age |
72. Does this business have a website?
Specify the business website address 1
Specify the business website address 2
Specify the business website address 3
e.g., www.example.ca
Statistics Canada engages in web-data extraction, also known as web scraping, which is a process by which information is gathered and copied from the Web using automated scripts or robots, for retrieval and analysis. As a result, we may visit the website for this organization to search for and compile additional information. The use of web scraping is part of a broader effort to reduce the response burden on organizations, as well as produce additional statistical indicators to ensure that our data remain accurate and relevant.
We will strive to ensure that the data collection does not interfere with the functionality of the website. Any data collected will be used by Statistics Canada for statistical and research purposes only, in accordance with the agency’s privacy and confidentiality mandate. All information collected by Statistics Canada is strictly protected.
Please visit Statistics Canada's web scraping initiative page for more information.
Please visit Statistics Canada's transparency and accountability page to learn more.
If you have any questions or concerns, please contact Statistics Canada Client Services, toll-free at 1-877-949-9492 (TTY: 1-800-363-7629) or by email at infostats@statcan.gc.ca. Additional information about this survey can be found by selecting the following link: Annual Capital and Repair Expenditures Survey: Actual, Preliminary and Intentions (CAPEX)
73. 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.
74. 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?
Who is the best person to contact about this questionnaire?
75. How long did it take to complete this questionnaire?
Include the time spent gathering the necessary information.
76. Do you have any comments about this questionnaire?