Thank you so much to our witnesses.
I certainly appreciate all of you appearing before this committee on an issue that I think is not going to impact the ag community tomorrow, but if we don't start preparing, then it will impact our ag community in five to 10 years.
I'm not talking about Canada imposing carbon border adjustments; I'm talking about other countries. It's going to become a reality for—and I think there's been testimony—the steel industry, for the cement industry and for our Canadian fertilizer industry that's exporting to the EU. This is all becoming an immediate reality in two years. I know there are EU auditors currently assessing the supply chain of our steel industry in Canada right now.
I know the biggest barrier right now to imposing carbon border adjustments is measurement and how we measure. There are a lot of Canadian universities working on that. Universities across the world are working on that.
Farmers are putting a lot of pressure across the world on their own legislatures. If we talk about CETA in France, the reason France has not adopted CETA yet is that their own farmers had massive protests, and EU farmers had massive protests on what they called mirror clauses. However, those are reciprocity clauses. Part of that discussion is imposing CBAMs on jurisdictions that may not have environmental laws similar to what they have.
That's why I think it's important to have this conversation now. It's so that we can prepare and so that we don't come back in five or 10 years with our pants down and say, “Oops, we should have done something”, because it takes a while to transition.
I agree that Canadian farmers are doing an amazing job. We have to tell that story better. We have to ensure that the way we measure our carbon footprint is science-based and is pushed and is accepted across the world.
With our biggest trading partner, we have Republicans and Democrats talking about imposing carbon border adjustments. We've had two bills already presented in the Senate on this particular matter.
I know that it may seem far-fetched for some of us, but it is going to become a reality. I can see it. If we are to continue trading in this world, there's going to be more pressure to stop carbon leakage.
We're not talking about Canada imposing carbon border adjustment mechanisms; it's about how we prepare and how we make sure that Canada is best prepared to face that. Of course, we have our trade vehicles and our trade institutions that we can use to fight WTO, etc., but how do we make sure that Canada is prepared to best equip our farmers here in Canada?
I can start with Mr. McCann.