Thank you.
You began your comments, both in your report and this morning, by saying that it has become more and more obvious that Canada cannot meet its Kyoto Protocol commitments to reduce greenhouse gases. You alluded to the lack of targets and the lack of planning. My question is related to governance and accountability.
In your overview on page 15 you alluded to the importance of good governance:
Planning, management, and performance go hand in hand. A good plan is important, but so is taking action and assuring results. Effective governance and accountability are fundamental in all policy areas and are especially crucial elements of complex, horizontal, long-term files like climate change.
You then have bullet points:
establishing clear roles, responsibilities, and authority for all federal departments and agencies;
designing and putting in place mechanisms to co-ordinate federal activities across departments and agencies;
tracking expenditures...and;
monitoring, on an ongoing basis, the performance of all programs...
My colleagues across the way did highlight the annual reporting. We agree with those recommendations. Recommendation 288, of course, takes us back not to annual reporting but to a system that for 13 years was not successful. We have a plan that we believe very strongly will have achievable results that will deal with the issue of climate change.
You've gone into the next paragraph for the final word. You've said that reducing our greenhouse gas emissions and adapting to present and future effects of climate change is a challenging task. It's a long journey, and there may be blind alleys and false starts along the way. Canadians should be able to expect the federal government to stay on course until lasting solutions are found. It's in our best interests. You've said we're at a crossroads, and I agree with those comments.
Do you believe that the lack of analysis done when we set our initial targets for Kyoto was a mistake? I'm assuming from what you've said that the answer is yes, but I just want to confirm that it's important that you have a plan that's well thought out, through consultation and proper analysis--social, environmental--and that is real and achievable and that the government then takes action on it.