The Partnership Group for Science and Engineering (PAGSE) www.pagse.org
is a cooperative association of more than 25 national organizations
in Science and Engineering. It was formed in June 1995, at the invitation
of the Academy of Science of the Royal Society of Canada. The national
organizations that comprise PAGSE represent approximately 50,000 individual
members from industry, academia, and government sectors. They work
collectively to represent the Canadian science and engineering community
to the Government of Canada, and to advance research and innovation
for the benefit of Canadians. PAGSE is not a lobby group. It does
not seek an audience in order to advance the cause of specific science
and engineering initiatives: rather, its intent is to address the
broader issues of science and engineering policy at the national level.
If PAGSE is to be truly representative of the science
and engineering community in Canada, it must ensure that you, individual
members of member societies and associations, are aware of the activities
that are undertaken in your name. While details may
be found on the PAGSE website ( www.pagse.org
), we also provide you with a periodic summary of activities.
Bacon & Eggheads:
PAGSE, in partnership with the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research
Council of Canada (NSERC), sponsors monthly breakfast meetings on Parliament
Hill, known as “Bacon and Eggheads”. The meetings inform
parliamentarians about recent advances in science and engineering. This
Fall, Parliament was prorogued until October 16th 2007; when it reconvened,
the following Bacon & Eggheads talks were offered. Given the importance
of oil sands development to energy and the Canadian economy, the two
talks were on complementary aspects of the topic:
- Can oil sands production and upgrading be sustainable?
Murray Gray, Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering, University
of Alberta
Thursday October 25, 2007
- Trading Water for Oil - Tailings Management in Surface-Mined
Oil Sands
Randy Mikula, Natural Resources Canada
Thursday November 29, 2007
PAGSE Monthly Meetings:
Guests representative of science and engineering in the government
and industry sectors are invited to monthly PAGSE meetings held at the
University of Ottawa to present their views on the status of science
and engineering in Canada in general and in the organisations they represent,
and to discuss the issues and challenges that they would like to see
PAGSE address. Since the summer, we have welcomed the following guests,
who have given their perspectives on S&T in Canada:
- October 16th: Eliot Phillipson,
President, Canada Foundation for Innovation
Dr. Phillipson provided information on strategic directions and
funding initiatives at the Canada Foundation for Innovation.
- November 22nd: Iain Stewart, Director General, Policy
Branch, Industry Canada
Iain Stewart presented the ‘diagnostics’, analysis and
objectives that had gone in to the federal strategy: Mobilizing
Science and Technology to Canada’s Advantage (released May
2007).
House
of Commons Finance Committee:
PAGSE submits a brief each fall to the House of Commons Standing Committee
on Finance (HCFC). In August 2007, we submitted a brief entitled “
The
Tax System the Country Needs for a Prosperous Future”.
The theme was governed by the stated priorities for briefs to the Finance
Committee for 2007.
Summary of the Submission:
Canada’s economic health relies on its human, natural and environmental
resources and a legislative environment that allows effective mobilization
of these resources. In research and development (R&D) this economic
health requires strength and balance in public, private and academic
sector initiatives. The new federal strategy for science and technology
provides the framework for strengthening Canada’s research and
innovation performance across sectors. It also recognizes the need
for measures to encourage industrial and private sector R&D.
Long-term research and monitoring that is essential to the public
good must be conducted in the public sector and supported with public
funds. A dynamic research environment in universities fosters new
knowledge, its distribution to other sectors, interdisciplinary partnerships,
education of students - and ensures a repository of expertise. This
pool of skilled human resources is drawn on by the private and public
sectors.
The research activities of the private sector are motivated by efficiency
and profit margin, as well as by competitive forces: this sector requires
a mix of realistic incentives and regulations. The corporate sector
already benefits from generous R&D tax credits which particularly
favour small firms. Credits are the main government tool for influencing
the overall level of business-led R&D; the issue is thus whether
they should be expanded or made more effective.
The Partnership Group recommends:
- Increased incentives to attract and retain the best scientists
and engineers;
- Increased support for research infrastructure in federal laboratories
and for indirect costs;
- Fiscal incentives to encourage private sector investment in
R&D;
- Support for strategic international partnerships and access
to international scientific programs/data.
For further information regarding PAGSE activities, please contact
your PAGSE representative www.pagse.org/en/links.htm
Dawn Conway
Email: conway@cfcas.ca
PAGSE Chair