Dr. Gray and Mr. Rosser, thank you so much for attending and providing me and everyone here with a great deal of insight into issues that are complicated and technical. It's at moments like this that I wish I'd taken chemistry and biology at university.
Mr. Gray or Mr. Rosser, I'm assuming both of you put together the presentation. Page 9 encapsulates the broad strokes of it. The first part says, basically, that we want to try to prevent climate change, but that in the process, we also want to take advantage of possible opportunities from climate change. You put it much more eloquently than I just did. We're trying adapt to it while simultaneously trying to mitigate it.
The second point you discussed was the whole notion of increasing productivity, but also decreasing the resources that you're using, basically producing more stuff, but making sure that, while producing more stuff, you're not getting more emissions in the air, but preventing climate change.
As a government, we're looking at two main areas. You have the side of laws and regulations and then funding. Not getting into the specifics, are there any particular areas of funding you think we should look at in those four areas that I talked about, beyond what you've talked about here? Also, on the regulatory side, we had witnesses, either at the last session or the earlier one, saying that perhaps the regulations are a bit too onerous, and other witnesses said that perhaps they're not onerous enough.
I'll leave that to Dr. Gray and Mr. Rosser to comment.