OECD-New Brunswick Conference on Place-Based Economic Development


Draft Agenda

Kindly note that the times indicated are based on Atlantic Standard Time (AST) and may differ depending on your local time zone.

Please download the draft agenda with event local times (AST).

Day 1 :

October 2, 2025
14:30 - 15:15
Setting Course
15:00 - 16:45
Session 1: New Brunswick and Atlantic Canada on the World Stage: Towards a More Globally Connected and Competitive Region  
New Brunswick is at an inflection point with opportunities to scale existing sectors while branching into new and related areas and establishing new trade partners, in Canada and overseas, all while implementing productivity-enhancing measures. To fulfil the province’s potential – and to contribute fully to Atlantic and Canadian competitiveness – actors need to come together across sectors, including business, civil society, higher education, and the public sector, to champion new and innovative ways of doing business and investing in people and places to ensure long-term resilience, productivity growth, and an overall boost in the region’s attractiveness for investment and talent.
17:00 - 18:15
Lunch
18:15 - 19:45
Session 2: Navigating Economic Uncertainty: Enhancing Trade, Export Development and Diversification for Regional Resilience 
Across the OECD regions are reconciling with the need for a more diversified approach to trade that promotes long-term economic resilience. Yet, finding new countries and regions with whom to build bridges is no short-term exercise – it requires an infrastructure and logistics plan to get goods and services to market and, leveraging regional ports, roads, rail and airports; it means working directly with small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), large companies, and actors in the investment attraction and export development space to support strategic diversification strategies. It also means working across all levels of government who can help facilitate a more navigable regulatory framework, while also freeing up land and warehousing and investing in transport solutions that facilitate trade competitiveness.
19:45 - 20:15
Refreshment Break
20:15 - 21:30
Session 3: Pathways to Net-Zero: an Economic Opportunity & Climate Imperative   
As regions across Canada and globally grapple with the urgent need to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, the challenge lies in setting ambitious climate targets, and in implementing practical, sector-specific pathways to reach them. In New Brunswick, emissions have declined in recent years, yet electricity, oil and gas, and transportation remain major sources. At the same time, the clean energy sector presents a momentous economic opportunity for regions right across the OECD, New Brunswick chief among them. This session will offer insights on how regions are pursuing decarbonisation strategies, from greening energy sources to diversifying their economies and how these can be linked to sustainable economic development.
21:30 - 23:00
Cocktail and Regional Trade Fair
23:00 - 00:30
Dinner

Day 2 :

October 3, 2025
12:30 - 13:15
Reflections on Day 1 and Keynote Speaker – Atlantic Canada’s Role in Building a Strong Canadian Economy
13:30 - 14:45
Session 4: Smart Growth: Driving Regional Competitiveness Through Innovation, SMEs and Entrepreneurship
Regional competitiveness is increasingly dependent on the ability to harness place-based assets, ranging from workforce skills and industrial ecosystems to R&D. In the EU, Smart Specialisation Strategies (S3) have emerged as a powerful, multi-stakeholder approach to drive innovation and guide investment in high-potential sectors. Regions can adopt and adapt these lessons to unlock new economic opportunities. Meanwhile, across the OECD, stagnating productivity and stark regional disparities underscore the need for coordinated action. Boosting innovation—through increased R&D spending, knowledge spillovers from large firms, and stronger support for SMEs—is central to addressing this challenge. Success will require cross-sector collaboration to harness digitalization, support innovation ecosystems, and scale the global potential of both emerging and established businesses.
15:00 - 16:15
Deep Dives: Exploring the Levers for Talent, Investor and Visitor Attraction in Atlantic Canada
Deep Dive A: Attracting and Retaining Talent – Lessons from OECD Regions
Talent attractiveness – including attracting national talent and retaining local talent – is a cornerstone of economic development, but not to be taken for granted. In an increasingly competitive market for human capital, innovative solutions are needed to attract and retain the talent needed, especially in critical sectors.
Deep Dive B: Attracting Foreign Direct Investment for Strategic and Sustainable Development 
To explore the trends and opportunities in global FDI and how regions can attract investments that help solidify existing value chains while bridging into new and related industries, leveraging their place-based assets and using targeted instruments.
Deep Dive C: Culture and Tourism as Drivers of Inclusive Regional Development
Opportunities to leverage regional identity, heritage, brands and cultural capital to attract visitors and cultural entrepreneurs.
Deep Dive D: Building community resilience through place-based approaches: lessons from coast to coast to coast
Well-being is strongly predicated on place, which requires a deep understanding of local assets and disparities at a granular level, to design policies and to co-develop inclusive solutions that make for great places to live, work and play.
16:15 - 17:15
Lunch
17:15 - 17:45
Reporting Back on the Deep Dives
17:45 - 19:00
Session 5: Getting from Here to There – Improving Coordination Across Sectors, Levels of Government and Across Borders
An array of bottlenecks exists to ensure that economic development strategies translate into concrete results. Issues like performance management, the adoption of AI in government, building strong multi-level partnerships and inter-governmental relations, addressing the fiscal and technical capacity of local government; and reducing the regulatory burden for investors, are all on the table.
19:00 - 19:30
Closing remarks
19:30 - 23:00
Site Visit for International and Out-of-Province Visitors