Canada鈥檚 future economic growth path is shrouded in uncertainty as the country considers its place in a rapidly changing world.
It鈥檚 clear that the U.S.,聽our traditional top trading聽partner, can no longer聽be counted on.
To thrive, we must invest in our top economic engines and ensure that Canadians聽鈥 and Canadian supply chains 鈥 are fully connected to the world.
One of those engines is the country鈥檚 busiest airport.
海角社区官网Pearson is expanding at a time when Canada needs every connection to the world, and shows the vital importance of the airport and its surrounding industrial lands, known as the Pearson Economic Zone.
Half a million Canadians work there, and it鈥檚 home to North America鈥檚 heaviest concentration of manufacturers. It鈥檚 a gateway for billions of dollars in annual international trade, generating $70.6-billion of annual economic activity, equal to seven per cent of Ontario鈥檚 GDP.
But there’s a catch. The research also highlights a chronic shortage of industrial and commercial land around the airport, and relentless pressure to convert it to residential.
海角社区官网and Ontario need housing, but not here 鈥 it would imperil the zone鈥檚 growth and affect the airport鈥檚 future. The Pearson Economic Zone needs protection, not redevelopment.
The research, carried out separately by Deloitte Canada, Oxford Economics and the Trillium Network for Advanced Manufacturing for Pearson and brought together in the report , shows the scale of the impact.
More than 52,000 people work at Pearson itself for many employers, pumping nearly $20-billion into the Greater 海角社区官网economy, according to Oxford. That will rise聽鈥 Pearson projects 65 million passengers a year by the early 2030s, up from roughly 45 million in 2023. So it鈥檚 upgrading its terminal spaces, revamping baggage and cargo infrastructure and building high-efficiency taxiways.
But the zone鈥檚 impact extends well beyond that, covering 200 square kilometres of some of the most valuable commercial land anywhere in Canada聽鈥 factories, warehouses, offices, logistics facilities. It鈥檚 home to more than 18,000 businesses, one out of every 10 in Ontario.
Manufacturers are particularly prominent, because the zone sits at the confluence of vital air, rail and highway links.
There are food and beverage companies like Molson-Coors, aerospace companies like Bombardier, life-sciences companies like Apotex and many others in sectors like construction, packaging and machinery.
All told, the zone is home to 2,000 factories and 92,000 manufacturing jobs, the largest concentration in North America, according to the Trillium Network 鈥 nearly 12 per cent of Ontario鈥檚 and 5 per cent of Canada鈥檚 manufacturing output.
Pearson鈥檚 build-out will trigger growth throughout the zone. Many businesses near the airport are already expanding amid demand for e-commerce warehouse and logistics space.
But Deloitte鈥檚 analysis shows that land demand remains intense. Commercial and industrial real estate in the zone has outperformed nearby markets in 海角社区官网and other North American industrial markets since the pandemic. Vacancy rates are lower, industrial land prices are higher and rents are rising more rapidly.
Competing for this valuable land are developers, which see it as a destination for homes and condos. For example, there is pressure to build 27,000 units beside Woodbine Racetrack, adjacent to industrial and manufacturing facilities and within final approach for many jets.
鈥淭he Pearson Economic Zone is vital to our prosperity,鈥 said Brendan Sweeney, managing director of the Trillium Network. This won鈥檛 come from housing, but from industry and economic activity, he argued in an interview.
Part of the challenge is that planes, trucks and factories mix poorly with housing, said Paul Blais, managing director of economic advisory at Deloitte, which did an extensive analysis of land use in the zone. More housing brings pressure for flight and noise restrictions, and taller buildings interfere with landing patterns. Once converted, these lands rarely revert. 鈥淐herish them, because they are difficult to get back,鈥 Blais said.聽
One cautionary tale cited in the industry is the expansion launched by Chicago O鈥橦are International in 2001. O鈥橦are needed to reconfigure runways and modernize terminals. The project required 20 years to realize, largely because of the social and political complexity of acquiring 433 adjacent acres via purchase and expropriation.
The economic threat facing Canada is a powerful reminder of why we need to strengthen and protect our transportation infrastructure聽鈥 including airports and the intertwined wealth-generating potential of the industrial lands around them.
This country has enjoyed a 35-year run of free trade with the United States, but there are no guarantees ahead.
Canada needs to cherish the economic assets that reliably generate聽jobs, economic growth and prosperity.
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