If I may, I'll go into my fundamental problem. My fundamental problem is that what we're talking about essentially is weather, not climate. Climate is a trend over a long term. Right now, you may not notice it, but we have the polar vortex out there. We have snowstorms everywhere. We don't exactly have tropical forests growing up in the Arctic. We have the opposite problem right now. If I followed the logic of some people that it's primarily human activity, well, primarily human activity, according to them, should be creating heat everywhere, but we have the opposite situation, and the planet has not heated up for 15 years.
Our worry in Canada is cold. We can live with a warmer climate in Canada. We can't live with a colder climate, because the ice sheets start to move down on us. The Antarctic ice sheet, for example, is expanding; it's not contracting. We've had cases where the Arctic ice sheet has retracted and now it has expanded again. These are weather issues.
It comes back to the fundamental thing I'm talking about. If we're talking about getting a study on how to deal with natural disasters, that's one thing, but tying it into climate change, which are a couple of fuzzy words that don't really mean anything, that's my problem.