This is actually a key issue, because it talks about making promises you can't keep.
Let me just find a slide.
Let's go to slide 5. It's easy to make promises on the environment. When a Liberal named McGuinty makes promises on the environment, people in my province are a little skeptical. I want to tell you a story, and this I think underlines the approach we're trying to take. We're trying to be honest and to be realistic about what we can accomplish. We're not going to tell people what they want to hear to get votes.
I was Minister of Energy in Ontario. We had five coal-fired generating stations. We said yes, you could close one immediately. It was convenient that it had four units, and on most days three of the units were down because it was so old and dilapidated. It was a plant to last 40 years; it had been operating for more than 50. We said, “Yes, you can close that one down, but you can't close the other four down like that.” And a Liberal named McGuinty promised that by 2007 you could close all the coal-fired plants. Now, when that promise was made, he did it with all this dirty coal all over his desk. And here's the promise he made, so it's unequivocal.
I am not going to make a promise I can't keep. I'm not going to make a promise that I know I can't keep when it's coming out of my mouth. And this is a perfect example of another Liberal making a promise on greenhouse gases and on reducing smog and pollution that can't be delivered. Not a single person in the world believed it was physically possible; yet they ran an election to do it.
The Liberal Party of Canada, when I became environment minister, actually put out a press release, one of whose parts, in the talking points to media, was that John Baird fought closing Nanticoke, which is the largest polluter in North America. I didn't fight closing Nanticoke. I said you could close it by 2015, but it wasn't possible to close it by 2007.
Here's a perfect example of a politician wanting to get elected who was prepared to promise the world and to lie to voters. And I am not prepared to do that. I am going to be open; I'm going to be honest. I believe global warming is one of the biggest challenges of our time; it's the biggest ecological threat. I think it demands real action, but achievable action, action in which the rubber will actually hit the road.
That's what we're trying to do in this country, to regain....The public sees this type of commitment and thinks all politicians are liars, and I'm tired of that. I think in Canada we have to rebuild our international image and make commitments that we can deliver on. That may be the approach some people take in this country, but it's not mine.