Thank you, Chair.
I'm going to be sharing my time with Mr. Watson.
Thank you, Mr. Layton, for being here. Your closing comments were that on the anniversary of Kyoto, Canadians and citizens globally want more action. We've had a decade of a lot of rhetoric, but the action has been dismal. We find ourselves 33% above the Kyoto target that Canada signed on to.
This government has taken that bull by the horns, so to speak. We have the toughest regulations and hard targets Canada has ever committed to: a 20% reduction by 2020 and a 60% to 70% reduction by 2050. They're some of the toughest targets in the world, but definitely the toughest in Canada.
You've repeatedly said that your plan is science-based. The last analogy used was the railway. They really didn't know how they were going to do it, but they had the heart and they made it happen. So that's my angle of questioning for you. You said it's science-based, but you've been very general. It sounds like, like the railway, you don't know how you're going to do it, but you're going to do it.
My first question is, have you costed your plan?