Annual Capital and Repair Expenditures Survey: Actual for 2021

Why are we conducting this survey?

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

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

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

Other important information

Authorization to collect this information

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

Confidentiality

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

Record linkages

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

Data-sharing agreements

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

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

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

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

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

You may also contact us by email at statcan.esd-helpdesk-dse-bureaudedepannage.statcan@canada.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.

Business or organization and contact information

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

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

Legal Name

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

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

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

Operating Name

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

  • Legal name
  • Operating name (if applicable)

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

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

  • First name
  • Last name
  • Title
  • Preferred language of communication
    • English
    • French
  • Mailing address (number and street)
  • City
  • Province, territory or state
  • Postal code or ZIP code
  • Country
  • Email address
  • Telephone number (including area code)
  • Extension number (if applicable)
    The maximum number of characters is 10.
  • Fax number (including area code)

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

  • Operational
  • Not currently operational
    Why is this business or organization not currently operational?
    • Seasonal operations
      • When did this business or organization close for the season?
        • Date
      • When does this business or organization expect to resume operations?
        • Date
    • Ceased operations
      • When did this business or organization cease operations?
        • Date
      • Why did this business or organization cease operations?
        • Bankruptcy
        • Liquidation
        • Dissolution
        • Other - Specify the other reasons why the operations ceased
    • Sold operations
      • When was this business or organization sold?
        • Date
      • What is the legal name of the buyer?
    • Amalgamated with other businesses or organizations
      • When did this business or organization amalgamate?
        • Date
      • What is the legal name of the resulting or continuing business or organization?
      • What are the legal names of the other amalgamated businesses or organizations?
    • Temporarily inactive but will re-open
      • When did this business or organization become temporarily inactive?
        • Date
      • When does this business or organization expect to resume operations?
        • Date
      • Why is this business or organization temporarily inactive?
    • No longer operating due to other reasons
      • When did this business or organization cease operations?
        • Date
      • Why did this business or organization cease operations?

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Description and examples

  • This is the current main activity
  • This is not the current main activity
    Provide a brief but precise description of this business or organization's main activity
    e.g., breakfast cereal manufacturing, shoe store, software development

Main activity

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

  • Yes
    When did the main activity change?
    Date
  • No

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

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

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

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, 2021 and March 31, 2022

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

  • May 1, 2020 to April 30, 2021
  • June 1, 2020 to May 31, 2021
  • July 1, 2020 to June 30, 2021
  • August 1, 2020 to July 31, 2021
  • September 1, 2020 to August 31, 2021
  • October 1, 2020 to September 30, 2021
  • November 1, 2020 to October 31, 2021
  • December 1, 2020 to November 30, 2021
  • January 1, 2021 to December 31, 2021
  • February 1, 2021 to January 31, 2022
  • March 1, 2021 to February 28, 2022
  • April 1, 2021 to March 31, 2022

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

  • September 18, 2020 to September 15, 2021 (e.g., floating year-end)
  • June 1, 2021 to December 31, 2021 (e.g., a newly opened business).

Fiscal Year Start date:

Fiscal Year-End date:

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

Select all that apply.

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

What are Capital Expenditures?

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:

  • modifications, acquisitions and major renovations
  • capital costs such as feasibility studies, architectural, legal, installation and engineering fees
  • subsidies and grants received and used in additions to fixed assets and construction-in-progress during the period
  • capitalized interest charges on loans with which capital projects are financed
  • work done by own labour force
  • additions to capital work in progress (construction-in-progress) accounts.

Exclude:

  • transfers from capital work in progress (construction-in-progress) to fixed assets accounts
  • assets associated with the acquisition of companies
  • property developed for sale and machinery or equipment acquired for sale (inventory).

How to Treat Leases

Include:

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

Exclude:

  • operating leases acquired as a lessee and capitalized to right-of-use assets in accordance with IFRS 16 (International Financial Reporting Standards)
  • assets acquired for lease to others, either as a capital or financial lease.

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.

Additional reporting instructions

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

Total capital and repair expenditures

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:

  • the cost of demolition of buildings, land servicing and site preparation
  • leasehold and land improvements
  • additions to work in progress
  • townsite facilities such as streets, sewers, stores and schools
  • all preconstruction planning and design costs such as engineer and consulting fees and any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation, etc.
  • cost of all new buildings, engineering, machinery and equipment which normally have a life of more than one year and are charged to fixed asset accounts
  • modifications, acquisitions and major renovations
  • subsidies
  • capitalized interest charges on loans with which capital projects are financed.

How to Treat Leases

Include:

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

Exclude:

  • right-of-use asset additions, leases and or acquisitions
  • assets acquired for lease to others, either as a capital or financial lease.

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:

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

D) 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.
For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were the organization's gross capital and repair expenditures for the following categories?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000
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

Total capital and repair expenditures

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.

  • No capital or repair expenditures to report this year, but may in future
  • No fixed assets (buildings, computers, software, etc.) held and none expected to be held by the legal entity covered by this questionnaire
    e.g., financial fund, holding company
  • No fixed assets (buildings, computers, software, etc.) are used in carrying out the operations covered by this questionnaire
    e.g., fixed assets used in other operations included in a separate questionnaire
  • Other - specify:

Gross Capital Expenditures - Residential Construction

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:

  • buildings that have accommodation units without self contained bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizens residences). These should be included in non-residential construction.
  • associated services and townsite facilities (e.g., natural gas mains and services, electric power lines). These should be included in non-residential construction.

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

Include the housing portion of multi-purpose projects and of townsites.

Exclude buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizens residences) and associated expenditures on services.

For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for residential construction?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000
Residential construction  
i. New Assets  
ii. Purchase of Used Canadian Assets  
iii. Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  

Gross Capital Expenditures - Non-residential construction

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:

  • manufacturing plants, warehouses, office buildings, shopping centres, etc.
  • roads, bridges, sewers, electric power lines, underground cables, etc.
  • the cost of demolition of buildings, land servicing and site preparation
  • leasehold and land improvements
  • additions to work in progress
  • townsite facilities such as streets, sewers, stores and schools
  • buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizen residences) and associated expenditures on services
  • all preconstruction planning and design costs such as engineer and consulting fees and any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation, etc.

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.

  • Yes
  • No

Gross Capital Expenditures - Non-residential construction

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.

  • Manufacturing plants
  • Industrial depots and service buildings
    e.g., maintenance garages
  • Farm buildings and structures
  • Other industrial sites and buildings - specify:

Commercial Building

Select all assets that apply.

  • Industrial laboratories and research and development centres
  • Warehouses
    e.g., distribution centres
  • Service stations
    Include automotive repair shops
  • Office buildings
    Include bank buildings
  • Hotels and motels
  • Restaurants
    Include nightclubs
  • Shopping centres, plazas, malls and stores
  • Theatres and halls
  • Indoor recreational facilities
    e.g., indoor ice skating rinks, indoor swimming pools
  • Other collective dwellings
    e.g., bunkhouse, workcamps
  • Student residences
  • Airports and other passenger terminals
    e.g., bus stations, boat passenger/ferry terminals
  • Communications buildings
  • Sports facilities with spectator capacity
  • Other commercial buildings, not elsewhere classified - specify:
    e.g., car/automotive dealerships, grain elevators, mail sorting facilities

Institutional Building

Select all assets that apply.

  • Schools, colleges, universities and other educational buildings
  • Religious centres and memorial sites
  • Hospitals
  • Nursing homes and senior citizen homes
  • Other health care buildings, not elsewhere classified
    e.g., dentist offices, physicians' offices
  • Daycare centres
  • Libraries
  • Historical sites
  • Museums
    Include observatories, art galleries, public archives, science centres
  • Public safety facilities
    e.g., prisons, fire stations
  • Other institutional buildings, not elsewhere classified - specify:

Marine Engineering Infrastructure

Select all assets that apply.

  • Seaports and harbours
  • Canals and waterways
  • Marinas
  • Other marine infrastructure - specify:

Transportation Engineering Infrastructure

Select all assets that apply.

  • Parking lots and garages
    Include electric car charging stations
  • Highways, roads and streets
  • Runways (include lighting)
  • Railway tracks
    Include light rails, underground or elevated, rapid transit systems
  • Bridges
  • Tunnels
  • Other land transportation infrastructure, not elsewhere classified - specify:

Waterworks Engineering Infrastructure

Select all assets that apply.

  • Water filtration plants
  • Water supply infrastructure

Sewage Engineering Infrastructure

Select all assets that apply.

  • Sewage treatment plants
  • Sewage collection and disposal infrastructure

Electric Power Engineering Infrastructure

Select all assets that apply.

  • Natural gas, coal and oil power plants
  • Nuclear power plants
  • Hydro-electric power plants
  • Other power generating plants (wind, solar, biomass)
  • Power transmission networks
  • Power distribution networks

Communication networks

Select all assets that apply.

  • Telecommunications transmission cables and lines (except optical fibre)
    e.g., aerial, underground and submarine
  • Telecommunications transmission optical fibre cables
    e.g., aerial, underground and submarine
  • Telecommunications transmission support structures
    e.g., towers, poles and conduit
  • Other communications networks - specify:

Oil and Gas Engineering Construction

Select all assets that apply.

  • Oil refineries
  • Natural gas processing plants
  • Pipelines (except water supply conduits)
  • Development drilling for oil and gas
  • Production facilities in oil and gas extraction
  • Enhanced recovery techniques for oil and gas
  • Site development services for oil and gas fields
  • Gas distribution systems (mains and services) and other oil and gas infrastructure
    e.g., storage tanks

Mining Engineering Construction

Select all assets that apply.

  • Mine surface buildings (except for beneficiation)
  • Mine buildings for ore beneficiation
  • Mine structures (except buildings)
  • Tailings disposal systems and settling ponds
  • Site development for mining

Other Engineering Construction

Select all assets that apply.

  • Pollution abatement and control infrastructure
  • Outdoor recreational facilities
    e.g., parks, hiking trails, campgrounds
  • Waste disposal facilities
  • Irrigation networks
  • Site remediation
  • Reclaimed land
  • Flood protection infrastructures
  • Other engineering works, not elsewhere classified - specify:

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:

  • manufacturing plants, warehouses, office buildings, shopping centres, etc.
  • roads, bridges, sewers, electric power lines, underground cables, etc.
  • the cost of demolition of buildings, land servicing and site preparation
  • leasehold and land improvements
  • additions to work in progress
  • townsite facilities such as streets, sewers, stores and schools
  • buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizen residences) and associated expenditures on services
  • all preconstruction planning and design costs such as engineer and consulting fees and any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation, etc.

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:

  • 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.

For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for industrial building construction?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected 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:

  • manufacturing plants, warehouses, office buildings, shopping centres, etc.
  • roads, bridges, sewers, electric power lines, underground cables, etc.
  • the cost of demolition of buildings, land servicing and site preparation
  • leasehold and land improvements
  • additions to work in progress
  • townsite facilities such as streets, sewers, stores and schools
  • buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizen residences) and associated expenditures on services
  • all preconstruction planning and design costs such as engineer and consulting fees and any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation, etc.

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:

  • 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.

For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for commercial building construction?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected 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:

  • manufacturing plants, warehouses, office buildings, shopping centres, etc.
  • roads, bridges, sewers, electric power lines, underground cables, etc.
  • the cost of demolition of buildings, land servicing and site preparation
  • leasehold and land improvements
  • additions to work in progress
  • townsite facilities such as streets, sewers, stores and schools
  • buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizen residences) and associated expenditures on services
  • all preconstruction planning and design costs such as engineer and consulting fees and any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation, etc.

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:

  • 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.

For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for institutional building construction?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected 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:

  • manufacturing plants, warehouses, office buildings, shopping centres, etc.
  • roads, bridges, sewers, electric power lines, underground cables, etc.
  • the cost of demolition of buildings, land servicing and site preparation
  • leasehold and land improvements
  • additions to work in progress
  • townsite facilities such as streets, sewers, stores and schools
  • buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizen residences) and associated expenditures on services
  • all preconstruction planning and design costs such as engineer and consulting fees and any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation, etc.

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:

  • 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.

For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for marine engineering construction?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected 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:

  • manufacturing plants, warehouses, office buildings, shopping centres, etc.
  • roads, bridges, sewers, electric power lines, underground cables, etc.
  • the cost of demolition of buildings, land servicing and site preparation
  • leasehold and land improvements
  • additions to work in progress
  • townsite facilities such as streets, sewers, stores and schools
  • buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizen residences) and associated expenditures on services
  • all preconstruction planning and design costs such as engineer and consulting fees and any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation, etc.

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:

  • 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.

For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for transportation engineering construction?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected 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:

  • manufacturing plants, warehouses, office buildings, shopping centres, etc.
  • roads, bridges, sewers, electric power lines, underground cables, etc.
  • the cost of demolition of buildings, land servicing and site preparation
  • leasehold and land improvements
  • additions to work in progress
  • townsite facilities such as streets, sewers, stores and schools
  • buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizen residences) and associated expenditures on services
  • all preconstruction planning and design costs such as engineer and consulting fees and any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation, etc.

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:

  • 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.

For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for waterworks engineering construction?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected useful life (years)
Water filtration 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:

  • manufacturing plants, warehouses, office buildings, shopping centres, etc.
  • roads, bridges, sewers, electric power lines, underground cables, etc.
  • the cost of demolition of buildings, land servicing and site preparation
  • leasehold and land improvements
  • additions to work in progress
  • townsite facilities such as streets, sewers, stores and schools
  • buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizen residences) and associated expenditures on services
  • all preconstruction planning and design costs such as engineer and consulting fees and any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation, etc.

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:

  • 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.

For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for sewage engineering construction?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected useful life (years)
Sewage 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:

  • manufacturing plants, warehouses, office buildings, shopping centres, etc.
  • roads, bridges, sewers, electric power lines, underground cables, etc.
  • the cost of demolition of buildings, land servicing and site preparation
  • leasehold and land improvements
  • additions to work in progress
  • townsite facilities such as streets, sewers, stores and schools
  • buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizen residences) and associated expenditures on services
  • all preconstruction planning and design costs such as engineer and consulting fees and any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation, etc.

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:

  • 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.

For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for electric power engineering construction?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected 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:

  • manufacturing plants, warehouses, office buildings, shopping centres, etc.
  • roads, bridges, sewers, electric power lines, underground cables, etc.
  • the cost of demolition of buildings, land servicing and site preparation
  • leasehold and land improvements
  • additions to work in progress
  • townsite facilities such as streets, sewers, stores and schools
  • buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizen residences) and associated expenditures on services
  • all preconstruction planning and design costs such as engineer and consulting fees and any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation, etc.

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:

  • 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.

For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for communications networks construction?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected 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:

  • manufacturing plants, warehouses, office buildings, shopping centres, etc.
  • roads, bridges, sewers, electric power lines, underground cables, etc.
  • the cost of demolition of buildings, land servicing and site preparation
  • leasehold and land improvements
  • additions to work in progress
  • townsite facilities such as streets, sewers, stores and schools
  • buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizen residences) and associated expenditures on services
  • all preconstruction planning and design costs such as engineer and consulting fees and any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation, etc.

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:

  • 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.

For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for oil and gas engineering construction?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected 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:

  • manufacturing plants, warehouses, office buildings, shopping centres,
    etc.
  • roads, bridges, sewers, electric power lines, underground cables,
    etc.
  • the cost of demolition of buildings, land servicing and site preparation
  • leasehold and land improvements
  • additions to work in progress
  • townsite facilities such as streets, sewers, stores and schools
  • buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizen residences) and associated expenditures on services
  • all preconstruction planning and design costs such as engineer and consulting fees and any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation, etc.

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:

  • 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 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.

For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for mining engineering construction?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected 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:

  • manufacturing plants, warehouses, office buildings, shopping centres, etc.
  • roads, bridges, sewers, electric power lines, underground cables, etc.
  • the cost of demolition of buildings, land servicing and site preparation
  • leasehold and land improvements
  • additions to work in progress
  • townsite facilities such as streets, sewers, stores and schools
  • buildings that have accommodation units without self contained or exclusive use of bathroom and kitchen facilities (e.g., some student and senior citizen residences) and associated expenditures on services
  • all preconstruction planning and design costs such as engineer and consulting fees and any materials supplied to construction contractors for installation, etc.

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:

  • 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.

For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for other engineering construction?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected 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

Capital Expenditures for Non-Residential Construction
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000
Industrial Building  
Total New Assets  
Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  
Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration)  
Commercial Building  
Total New Assets  
Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  
Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration)  
Institutional Building  
Total New Assets  
Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  
Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration)  
Marine Engineering 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  

Gross Capital Expenditures - Machinery and Equipment

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:

  • automobiles, trucks, professional and scientific equipment, office and store furniture and appliances
  • computers (hardware only), broadcasting, telecommunications and other information and communication technologies equipment
  • motors, generators, transformers
  • any capitalized tooling expenses
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • progress payments paid out before delivery in the year in which such payments are made
  • any balance owing or holdbacks should be reported in the year the cost is incurred.

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:

  • 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.

  • Yes
  • No

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:

  • automobiles, trucks, professional and scientific equipment, office and store furniture and appliances
  • computers (hardware only), broadcasting, telecommunications and other information and communication technologies equipment
  • motors, generators, transformers
  • any capitalized tooling expenses
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • progress payments paid out before delivery in the year in which such payments are made
  • any balance owing or holdbacks should be reported in the year the cost is incurred.

Medium and Heavy Trucks, Buses and Other Motor Vehicles

Select all assets that apply.

  • Medium and heavy-duty trucks
  • Buses
  • Freight and utility trailers
  • Special-purpose vehicles
    e.g., ambulances, garbage truck, fire trucks, tow trucks
  • Materials handling trucks and tractors
    e.g., forklifts
  • Other motor vehicles

Passenger Cars and Light Trucks

Select all assets that apply.

  • Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs

Other Transportation Equipment

Select all assets that apply.

  • Locomotives, railway rolling stock, and rapid transit equipment
  • Civilian aircraft
  • Non-military ships, barges and platforms
  • Boats and personal watercraft
  • Other transportation equipment - specify:

Processing Equipment

Select all assets that apply.

  • Water treatment equipment
  • Filters and strainers for fluids and fluid power systems
  • Packing, packaging, and bottling machinery
  • Mineral crushing, screening, processing and beneficiation machinery and equipment
  • Metalworking machinery
  • Industrial moulds, special dies, and patterns
  • Other industry-specific manufacturing machinery, not elsewhere classified - specify:
    Include tooling

Computers and Office Equipment

Select all assets that apply.

  • Computers and computer peripheral equipment
  • Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines (except computers and peripherals)
  • Office furniture

Telecommunications, Cable and Broadcasting Equipment

Select all assets that apply.

  • Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment
    e.g., alarm systems
  • Navigational and guidance instruments
  • Telephone and data communications equipment
  • Televisions and other audio and video equipment
  • Other communication equipment - specify:

Commercial and Service Industry Machinery and Equipment

Select all assets that apply.

  • Commercial cooking and food-warming equipment
  • Commercial and service industry machinery and equipment, not elsewhere classified

Other Industrial Machinery and Equipment

Select all assets that apply.

  • Heavy-gauge metal containers (including intermodal)
  • Hand tools and power hand tools (except welding and soldering equipment)
  • Logging machinery and equipment
  • Rock drilling machinery and equipment
  • Other mining and quarrying machinery and equipment, not elsewhere classified
  • Oil and gas field production machinery and equipment
  • Construction machinery and equipment
  • Nuclear reactor steam supply systems
  • Welding and soldering equipment
  • Industrial furnaces and ovens, and electric industrial heating equipment
  • Other materials handling equipment, conveyors, and elevators

Medical, Scientific and Technical Instruments and equipment

Select all assets that apply.

  • Medical and laboratory equipment (except scientific instruments)
  • Scientific and technical instruments (except electromedical and irradiation equipment)
  • Other measuring, control, and scientific instruments (except electromedical and irradiation equipment)
  • Medical, dental and personal safety supplies

Other Machinery and Equipment

Select all assets that apply.

  • Institutional and other furniture, not elsewhere classified (including furniture frames)
  • Engines (except gasoline and diesel engines for motor vehicles, and aircraft engines) and mechanical power transmission equipment
  • Pumps and compressors
  • Heating and cooling equipment (except household refrigerators and freezers)
    e.g., heating, ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC)
  • Power and distribution transformers
  • Other transformers
  • Military aircraft
  • Military ships
  • Military armoured vehicles
  • Billboards
  • Non-residential mobile buildings
  • Electric motors and generators
  • Switchgear, switchboards, relays, and industrial control apparatus
  • Turbines, turbine generators, and turbine generator sets
  • Boilers, metal tanks, industrial valves and seals
  • Agricultural, lawn and garden machinery and equipment
  • Instruments for measuring electricity
  • Industrial and commercial fans, blowers and air purification equipment
  • Appliances
  • Unmanned aerial vehicles (drones)
  • Partitions, shelving, lockers and other fixtures
  • Batteries
  • Sporting and athletic goods
  • Other machinery and equipment - specify:

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:

  • automobiles, trucks, professional and scientific equipment, office and store furniture and appliances
  • computers (hardware only), broadcasting, telecommunications and other information and communication technologies equipment
  • motors, generators, transformers
  • any capitalized tooling expenses
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • progress payments paid out before delivery in the year in which such payments are made
  • any balance owing or holdbacks should be reported in the year the cost is incurred.

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:

  • 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.

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?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected 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:

  • automobiles, trucks, professional and scientific equipment, office and store furniture and appliances
  • computers (hardware only), broadcasting, telecommunications and other information and communication technologies equipment
  • motors, generators, transformers
  • any capitalized tooling expenses
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • progress payments paid out before delivery in the year in which such payments are made
  • any balance owing or holdbacks should be reported in the year the cost is incurred.

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:

  • 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.

For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for passenger cars and light trucks?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected 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:

  • automobiles, trucks, professional and scientific equipment, office and store furniture and appliances
  • computers (hardware only), broadcasting, telecommunications and other information and communication technologies equipment
  • motors, generators, transformers
  • any capitalized tooling expenses
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • progress payments paid out before delivery in the year in which such payments are made
  • any balance owing or holdbacks should be reported in the year the cost is incurred.

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:

  • 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.

For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for other transportation equipment?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected 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:

  • automobiles, trucks, professional and scientific equipment, office and store furniture and appliances
  • computers (hardware only), broadcasting, telecommunications and other information and communication technologies equipment
  • motors, generators, transformers
  • any capitalized tooling expenses
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • progress payments paid out before delivery in the year in which such payments are made
  • any balance owing or holdbacks should be reported in the year the cost is incurred.

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:

  • 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.

For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for processing equipment?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected 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:

  • automobiles, trucks, professional and scientific equipment, office and store furniture and appliances
  • computers (hardware only), broadcasting, telecommunications and other information and communication technologies equipment
  • motors, generators, transformers
  • any capitalized tooling expenses
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • progress payments paid out before delivery in the year in which such payments are made
  • any balance owing or holdbacks should be reported in the year the cost is incurred.

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:

  • 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.

For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for computers and office equipment?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected 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:

  • automobiles, trucks, professional and scientific equipment, office and store furniture and appliances
  • computers (hardware only), broadcasting, telecommunications and other information and communication technologies equipment
  • motors, generators, transformers
  • any capitalized tooling expenses
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • progress payments paid out before delivery in the year in which such payments are made
  • any balance owing or holdbacks should be reported in the year the cost is incurred.

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:

  • 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.

For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for telecommunications, cable and broadcasting equipment?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected 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:

  • automobiles, trucks, professional and scientific equipment, office and store furniture and appliances
  • computers (hardware only), broadcasting, telecommunications and other information and communication technologies equipment
  • motors, generators, transformers
  • any capitalized tooling expenses
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • progress payments paid out before delivery in the year in which such payments are made
  • any balance owing or holdbacks should be reported in the year the cost is incurred.

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:

  • 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.

For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for commercial and service industry machinery and equipment?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected 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:

  • automobiles, trucks, professional and scientific equipment, office and store furniture and appliances
  • computers (hardware only), broadcasting, telecommunications and other information and communication technologies equipment
  • motors, generators, transformers
  • any capitalized tooling expenses
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • progress payments paid out before delivery in the year in which such payments are made
  • any balance owing or holdbacks should be reported in the year the cost is incurred.

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:

  • 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 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.

For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for other industrial machinery and equipment?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected 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:

  • automobiles, trucks, professional and scientific equipment, office and store furniture and appliances
  • computers (hardware only), broadcasting, telecommunications and other information and communication technologies equipment
  • motors, generators, transformers
  • any capitalized tooling expenses
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • progress payments paid out before delivery in the year in which such payments are made
  • any balance owing or holdbacks should be reported in the year the cost is incurred.

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:

  • 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.

For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for medical, scientific and technical instruments and equipment?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected 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:

  • automobiles, trucks, professional and scientific equipment, office and store furniture and appliances
  • computers (hardware only), broadcasting, telecommunications and other information and communication technologies equipment
  • motors, generators, transformers
  • any capitalized tooling expenses
  • acquisitions to work in progress
  • progress payments paid out before delivery in the year in which such payments are made
  • any balance owing or holdbacks should be reported in the year the cost is incurred.

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:

  • 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.

For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for other machinery and equipment?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected 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

Capital Expenditures for Machinery and Equipment
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000
Medium and Heavy Trucks, Buses and Other Motor Vehicles  
Total New Assets  
Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  
Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration)  
Passenger Cars and Light Trucks  
Total New Assets  
Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  
Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration)  
Other Transportation Equipment  
Total New Assets  
Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  
Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration)  
Processing Equipment  
Total New Assets  
Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  
Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration)  
Computers and Office Equipment  
Total New Assets  
Total Renovation, Retrofit, Refurbishing, Overhauling, Restoration  
Total new assets (including renovation, retrofit, refurbishing, overhauling, restoration)  
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  

Gross Capital Expenditures - Software

33. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, did this organization have capital expenditures for software?

  • Yes
  • No

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:

  • 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.

For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's expenditures for software?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Expected 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    

Gross Capital Expenditures - Oil and gas and mineral exploration

35. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, did this organization have capital expenditures for oil and gas and mineral exploration?

  • Yes
  • No

36. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's expenditures for oil and gas and mineral exploration?

For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's expenditures for oil and gas and mineral exploration?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000
a. Exploration drilling for oil and gas  
b. Other oil and gas exploration  
c. Mineral exploration  
d. Total expenditures  

Gross Capital Expenditures - Environmental protection activities and resources management activities

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:

  • solid waste management
  • wastewater management
  • air pollution management
  • protection and remediation of soil, groundwater and surface water
  • protection and restoration of biodiversity and habitat
  • noise and vibration abatement
  • protection against radiation.

Resources management activities are:

  • heat and energy savings and management
  • use of fuel efficient vehicle and efficient transportation goods or technologies
  • production of energy from renewable sources or nuclear energy.

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.

  • Yes
  • No

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:

  • Collection-related goods and technologies:
    • collection vehicles for waste, recycling and organics
    • containers for collection of waste, recycling and organics
    • other recycling equipment used in collection.
  • Separating and sorting-related goods and technologies: air classifiers, magnetic separators, eddy current separators, etc.
  • Compaction-related goods and technologies: balers, densifiers, compactors, shredders, granulators, etc.
  • Centralized biological reprocessing technologies: centralized composters, etc.
  • Disposal-related goods and technologies:
    • equipment for landfill leachate collection and containment
    • equipment for landfill gas management
    • equipment for thermal treatment (e.g., rotary kiln incinerator, mass burning, starved air incinerator, fluidized bed).
  • 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:
    • tanks and related components for dilution or equalization, neutralization, sedimentation, chemical precipitation
    • oil separators, skimmers
    • ion exchange beds
    • air stripping tanks or columns
    • liquid extraction columns
    • micro-porous membrane adsorbers
    • equipment for advanced chemical oxidation or UV radiation
    • pre-treatment filters.
  • Centralized physical or chemical and biological treatment of sewage:
    • intake screens
    • air sparging grit chambers
    • oil separators, skimmers
    • tanks and related components for sedimentation, chemical precipitation or flocculation, aerobic biological treatment, aeration, clarification, disinfection
    • membrane bioreactors
    • trickling filters
    • anaerobic digesters.

Air pollution management

Examples of related technologies:

  • Physical or chemical treatment technologies:
    • filters and cyclones
    • electrostatic precipitators
    • scrubbers
    • waste gas absorbers and waste gas flare or incinerators
    • industrial catalytic converters
    • pollutant recovery condensers
    • adsorbers.
  • Greenhouse gas control technologies:
    • clean coal processing technologies
    • carbon capture and sequestration technologies and storage
    • air and off-gas treatments.
  • Air quality and air pollution technologies: low emitting burners.
  • Monitoring and compliance technologies:
    • leak detection technologies
    • environmental measurement apparatus.

Protection and remediation of soil, groundwater and surface water

Examples of related activities:

  • In situ biological treatments:
    • enhanced bioremediation
    • phytoremediation
    • bioventing.
  • Ex situ biological treatments:
    • bioreaction
    • biopiles
    • landfarming
    • slurry phase biological treatment.
  • In situ physical and chemical treatments:
    • biochar
    • chemical oxidation
    • fracturing
    • soil flushing
    • soil vapour extraction
    • solidification
    • stabilization
    • air sparging
    • bioslurping
    • directional wells
    • dual phase extraction
    • thermal treatment
    • hydrofracturing enhancements
    • in-well air stripping
    • passive and reactive treatment walls.
  • Ex situ physical and chemical treatments:
    • chemical extraction
    • chemical reduction and oxidation
    • dehalogenation
    • separation
    • soil washing
    • solidification
    • stabilization
    • adsorption and absorption
    • advanced oxidation
    • air stripping
    • ion exchange
    • precipitation
    • flocculation
    • coagulation
    • separation
    • sprinkler irrigation.
  • In situ thermal treatments:
    • hot air injection
    • electrical resistance.
  • Ex situ thermal treatments:
    • incineration
    • pyrolysis
    • thermal desorption.
  • Containment

Heat and energy savings and management

Examples of related goods and technologies:

  • Efficient industrial or commercial equipment:
    • high efficiency burners and boilers (Energy Star)
    • high efficiency pumps (Energy Star) and motors (NEMA PremiumTM)
    • high efficiency industrial or commercial HVAC (Energy Star)
    • combined heat and power generation (CHP/cogeneration)
    • high efficiency industrial or commercial lighting systems (Energy Star)
    • automation and control technologies
    • energy efficient filters and processes
    • advanced insulation (e.g., super insulating materials (SIMs); vacuum insulation panels (VIP), gas-filled panels (GFP); and aerogel-based products (ABP))
    • predictive maintenance technologies (e.g., twinning, sensors, related software).
  • Demand management technologies:
    • smart inverters
    • smart meters and devices
    • phasor measurement units
    • management systems (software).
  • Energy storage technologies:
    • flywheels
    • equipment for pumped hydro systems
    • equipment for compressed air systems
    • advanced batteries (e.g., NiCd, NiMH, Li-ion, NaS, NaNiCl, hybrid flow, redox flow, hydrogen storage, synthetic natural gas)
    • fuel cells
    • thermal storage systems
    • double-layer capacitors (DLC)
    • superconducting magnetic energy storage (SMES).

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.

For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were this organization's gross capital expenditures for each environmental protection and resources management activity?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  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  

Environmental protection and resources management activities

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.

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

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.

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

Source of funding

42. Please provide the source of funding breakdown of the capital expenditures reported earlier in the survey.

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.

Sources of funding include grants, subsidies, donations, credit and venture capital from external sources, as well as internal funding.

Please provide the source of funding breakdown of the capital expenditures reported earlier in the survey.
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000
a. Municipal or regional government grants, subsidies, contributions  
b. Provincial and territorial government grants, subsidies, contributions  
c. Federal government grants, subsidies, contributions  
d. Private, internal and other sources of funding  

Gross Capital Expenditures - Cost Components of Expenditures

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.

  • Yes
  • No

Cost Components of Expenditures

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.

For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, please provide details on the cost of own account (internal costs) imputed to fixed assets.
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000
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  

Disposals and Sales of Fixed Assets

45. For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, did this organization dispose or sell any fixed assets?

  • Yes
  • No

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.

  • Manufacturing plants
  • Industrial depots and service buildings
    e.g., maintenance garages
  • Farm buildings and structures
  • Other industrial sites and buildings - specify:

Commercial Building

Select all assets that apply.

  • Industrial laboratories, research and development centres
  • Warehouses
    e.g., distribution centres
  • Service stations
    Include automotive repair shops
  • Office buildings
    Include bank buildings
  • Hotels and motels
  • Restaurants
    Include nightclubs
  • Shopping centres, plazas, malls and stores
  • Theatres and halls
  • Indoor recreational facilities
    e.g., indoor ice skating rinks, indoor swimming pools
  • Other collective dwellings
    e.g., bunkhouse, workcamps
  • Student residences
  • Airports and other passenger terminals
    e.g., bus stations, boat passenger/ferry terminals
  • Communications buildings
  • Sports facilities with spectator capacity
  • Other commercial properties, not elsewhere classified - specify:
    e.g., car/automotive dealerships, grain elevators, mail sorting facilities

Institutional Building

Select all assets that apply.

  • Schools, colleges, universities and other educational buildings
  • Religious centres and memorial sites
  • Hospitals
  • Nursing homes and senior citizen homes
  • Other health care buildings, not elsewhere classified
    e.g., dentist offices, physicians' offices
  • Daycare centres
  • Libraries
  • Historical sites
  • Museums
    Include observatories, art galleries, public archives, science centres
  • Public safety facilities
    e.g., prisons, fire stations
  • Other institutional buildings, not elsewhere classified - specify:

Marine Engineering Infrastructure

Select all assets that apply.

  • Seaports and harbours
  • Canals and waterways
  • Marinas
  • Other marine engineering infrastructure - specify:

Transportation Engineering Infrastructure

Select all assets that apply.

  • Parking lots and garages
    Include electric car charging stations
  • Highways, roads and streets
  • Runways (include lighting)
  • Railway tracks
    Include light rails, underground or elevated, rapid transit systems
  • Bridges
  • Tunnels
  • Other land transportation infrastructure, not elsewhere classified - specify:

Waterworks Engineering Infrastructure

Select all assets that apply.

  • Water filtration plants
  • Water supply infrastructure

Sewage Engineering Infrastructure

Select all assets that apply.

  • Sewage treatment plants
  • Sewage collection and disposal infrastructure

Electric Power Engineering Infrastructure

Select all assets that apply.

  • Natural gas, coal and oil power plants
  • Nuclear power plants
  • Hydro-electric power plants
  • Other power generating plants (wind, solar, biomass)
  • Power transmission networks
  • Power distribution networks

Communication Networks

Select all assets that apply.

  • Telecommunications transmission cables and lines (except optical fibre)
    e.g., aerial, underground and submarine
  • Telecommunications transmission optical fibre cables
    e.g., aerial, underground and submarine
  • Telecommunications transmission support structures
    e.g., towers, poles and conduit
  • Other communications networks - specify:

Oil and Gas Engineering Construction

Select all assets that apply.

  • Oil refineries
  • Natural gas processing plants
  • Pipelines (exclude water supply conduits)
  • Development drilling for oil and gas
  • Production facilities in oil and gas extraction
  • Enhanced recovery techniques for oil and gas
  • Site development services for oil and gas fields
  • Gas distribution systems (mains and services) and other oil and gas infrastructure
    e.g., storage tanks

Mining Engineering Construction

Select all assets that apply.

  • Mine surface buildings (except for beneficiation)
  • Mine buildings for ore beneficiation
  • Mine structures (except buildings)
  • Tailings disposal systems and settling ponds
  • Site development for mining

Other Engineering Construction

Select all assets that apply.

  • Pollution abatement and control infrastructure
  • Outdoor recreational facilities
    e.g., parks, hiking trails, campgrounds
  • Waste disposal facilities
  • Irrigation networks
  • Site remediation
  • Reclaimed land
  • Flood protection infrastructure
  • Other engineering works, not elsewhere classified - specify:

Medium and Heavy Trucks, Buses and Other Motor Vehicles

Select all assets that apply.

  • Medium and heavy-duty trucks
  • Buses
  • Freight and utility trailers
  • Special-purpose vehicles
    e.g., ambulances, garbage truck, fire trucks, tow trucks
  • Materials handling trucks and tractors
    e.g., forklifts
  • Other motor vehicles

Passenger Cars and Light Trucks

Select all assets that apply.

  • Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs

Other Transportation Equipment

Select all assets that apply.

  • Locomotives, railway rolling stock, and rapid transit equipment
  • Civilian aircraft
  • Non-military ships, barges and platforms
  • Boats and personal watercraft
  • Other transportation equipment - specify:

Processing Equipment

Select all assets that apply.

  • Water treatment equipment
  • Filters and strainers for fluids and fluid power systems
  • Packing, packaging, and bottling machinery
  • Mineral crushing, screening, processing and beneficiation machinery and equipment
  • Metalworking machinery
  • Industrial moulds, special dies, and patterns
  • Other industry-specific manufacturing machinery, not elsewhere classified - specify:
    Include tooling

Computers and Office Equipment

Select all assets that apply.

  • Computers and computer peripheral equipment
  • Optical and projection equipment, photocopiers, and office machines (except computers and peripherals)
  • Office furniture

Telecommunications, Cable and Broadcasting Equipment

Select all assets that apply.

  • Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment
    e.g., alarm systems
  • Navigational and guidance instruments
  • Telephone and data communications equipment
  • Televisions and other audio and video equipment
  • Other communication equipment - specify:

Commercial and Service Industry Machinery and Equipment

Select all assets that apply.

  • Commercial cooking and food-warming equipment
  • Commercial and service industry machinery and equipment, not elsewhere classified

Other Industrial Machinery and Equipment

Select all assets that apply.

  • Heavy-gauge metal containers (including intermodal)
  • Hand tools and power hand tools (except welding and soldering equipment)
  • Logging machinery and equipment
  • Rock drilling machinery and equipment
  • Other mining and quarrying machinery and equipment, not elsewhere classified
  • Oil and gas field production machinery and equipment
  • Construction machinery and equipment
  • Nuclear reactor steam supply systems
  • Welding and soldering equipment
  • Industrial furnaces and ovens, and electric industrial heating equipment
  • Other materials handling equipment, conveyors, and elevators

Medical, Scientific and Technical Instruments and equipment

Select all assets that apply.

  • Medical and laboratory equipment (except scientific instruments)
  • Scientific and technical instruments (except electromedical and irradiation equipment)
  • Other measuring, control, and scientific instruments (except electromedical and irradiation equipment)
  • Medical, dental and personal safety supplies

Other Machinery and Equipment

Select all assets that apply.

  • Institutional and other furniture, not elsewhere classified (including furniture frames)
  • Engines (except gasoline and diesel engines for motor vehicles, and aircraft engines) and mechanical power transmission equipment
  • Pumps and compressors
  • Heating and cooling equipment (except household refrigerators and freezers)
    e.g., heating, ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC)
  • Power and distribution transformers
  • Other transformers
  • Military aircraft
  • Military ships
  • Military armoured vehicles
  • Billboards
  • Non-residential mobile buildings
  • Waste and scrap of iron and steel
  • Waste and scrap of aluminum and aluminum alloy
  • Waste and scrap of other non-ferrous metals
  • Electric motors and generators
  • Switchgear, switchboards, relays, and industrial control apparatus
  • Turbines, turbine generators, and turbine generator sets
  • Boilers, metal tanks, industrial valves and seals
  • Agricultural, lawn and garden machinery and equipment
  • Instruments for measuring electricity
  • Industrial and commercial fans, blowers and air purification equipment
  • Appliances
  • Unmanned aerial vehicles (drones)
  • Partitions, shelving, lockers and other fixtures
  • Batteries
  • Sporting and athletic goods
  • Other machinery and equipment - specify:

Software

Select all assets that apply.

  • Pre-Packaged Software
  • Custom software

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.

For the fiscal year ending YYYY-MM-DD, what were the selling price and gross book value of the disposed or sold land?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000
Land  
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:

  • 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.

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?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
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:

  • 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.

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?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Manufacturing plants    
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:

  • 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.

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?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Industrial laboratories, research and development centres    
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:

  • 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.

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?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Schools, colleges, universities and other educational buildings    
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:

  • 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.

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?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Seaports    
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:

  • 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.

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?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Parking lots and garages    
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:

  • 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.

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?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Water filtration plants    
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:

  • 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.

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?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Sewage treatment plants    
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:

  • 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.

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?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Steam production plants    
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:

  • 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.

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?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Telecommunications transmission cables and lines (except optical fibre) - (e.g., aerial, underground and submarine)    
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:

  • 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.

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?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Oil refineries    
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:

  • 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.

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?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Mine surface buildings (except for beneficiation)    
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:

  • 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.

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?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Pollution abatement and control    
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:

  • 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.

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?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Medium and heavy-duty trucks    
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:

  • 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.

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?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Passenger cars, light-duty trucks, vans and SUVs    
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:

  • 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.

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?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Locomotives, railway rolling stock, and rapid transit equipment    
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:

  • 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.

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?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Water treatment equipment    
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:

  • 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.

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?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Computers and computer peripheral equipment    
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:

  • 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.

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?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Broadcast, studio, alarm, and signalling equipment    
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:

  • 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.

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?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Commercial cooking and food-warming equipment    
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:

  • 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.

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?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Heavy-gauge metal containers (including intermodal)    
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:

  • 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.

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?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Medical and laboratory equipment (except scientific instruments)    
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:

  • 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.

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?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Institutional and other furniture, not elsewhere classified (including furniture frames)    
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:

  • 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.

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?
Table summary
This table contains no data. It is an example of an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada.
  CAN$ '000 Years
Pre-Packaged Software    
a. Selling Price    
b. Gross Book Value    
c. Age    
Custom software    
a. Selling Price    
b. Gross Book Value    
c. Age    

Notification of intent to extract web data

72. Does this business have a website?

  • Yes
  • No

Specify the business website address

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@canada.ca. Additional information about this survey can be found by selecting the following link:

Annual Capital and Repair Expenditures Survey: Actual for 2020

Changes or events

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.

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

Contact person

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?

  • Yes
  • No

Who is the best person to contact about this questionnaire?

  • First name:
  • Last name:
  • Title:
  • Email address:
  • Telephone number (including area code):
  • Extension number (if applicable):
    The maximum number of characters is 5.
  • Fax number (including area code):

Feedback

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

Include the time spent gathering the necessary information.

  • Hours:
  • Minutes:

76. Do you have any comments about this questionnaire?

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