Thank you for that answer.
An economic report released said that the price of pollution adds 30¢ to a $100 grocery bill. What does that and your data suggest about the impact of carbon pricing on food prices? We've heard that other factors are having a greater effect on grocery prices, factors like climate change, supply chain issues and global energy prices.
Can you comment and expand on that? What we can do here in Canada to mitigate those factors?