Mr. Chair, I remember that the Alberta government had submitted a number. Their estimate had the pollution pricing bid in place in Alberta in 2019. My recollection is that their estimate had the figure at about $2.7 million as the added cost from pollution pricing.
The grain sector in Alberta, I believe, has a total cost in the neighbourhood of about $5 billion. Some of the other analyses that we received from Saskatchewan and Manitoba tried to extrapolate pollution pricing at higher pollution pricing levels. They tried to estimate not just the direct cost associated with pollution pricing for producers but also the indirect costs. Some of those did, in fact, generate higher estimates.