Thank you, Mr. Chair. I will be sharing my time with Mr. Harvey, as you mentioned.
Thank you to the witnesses for being here this morning.
As has been pointed out, the focus is to be on targeting and modelling. I appreciate the comments on adaptation, because it's an important topic, but that's not the topic this morning.
We've heard some comments from the Liberal Party regarding Bill C-288. It sounds as though they're already considering amendments to this bill in relation to targeting. But Bill C-288, as it is before us, is quite clear, even in its title: An Act to ensure Canada meets its global climate change obligations under the Kyoto Protocol.
In terms of targets, the Kyoto Protocol requires that Canada reduce its average annual greenhouse gas emissions, during the period of 2008 to 2012, to 6% below their level in 1990. We've heard from the Commissioner of the Environment that we will not meet those targets. We've heard from the Minister of the Environment that we will not meet those targets. We've heard from the witnesses at this committee already that we will not meet those targets. One of them said that Bill C-288 would have been a good bill in 1998, but it's not relevant anymore. We had an opportunity to meet those targets, possibly, but it's too late.
My first question to you is this, and I think some of you addressed this already during your comments. Without spending billions of dollars internationally to meet those targets, can we domestically meet those targets?
Mr. Sauchyn, I think you said you don't know.
Perhaps I can ask each of you for a yes , no, or I don't know to this question: do you believe we can meet those Kyoto targets, which is what Bill C-288 is asking us to do?