Good afternoon, Minister. It's good to see you again.
If I understand the compensation package correctly, there will be just under $70 million a year, so $691 million over 10 years. I, too, have met with the egg farmers and the chicken producers, and they are very supportive of the monies flowing into this kind of pot that would drive innovation and efficiency.
If I could just bring some perspective to the numbers, though, these are the sectors that rely on barns. They need to be heated into the season that we're going into now, which we call a Canadian winter. There are just over 5,000 producers. Following along the logic of my colleague Mr. Blois, if you take those numbers of about $70 million a year, and 5,000 producers, you're at about $14,000 per producer per year. I recognize that's probably not how the funds will flow, but this is just to give some perspective.
It's an interesting coincidence that this $14,000 is about the same number that the Canadian Federation of Independent Business calculates is the cost of the carbon tax to the average farm. Chicken, poultry, and egg producers would be higher users than average, again, because they're using barns.
Do you believe that these compensatory funds could be fully offset through innovation, through efficiency and mitigation measures, which you've mentioned, to offset the costs of the carbon tax to these producers?