As you know, I've worked full-time on this file since 1996 and would not have done so unless I personally thought climate change was the most important issue mankind faces. Beyond saying that, the point I'm trying to raise is that I'm not sure any of that matters right now. The fact is that the proposed regulated industrial caps the Government of Canada has on the table right now are tougher than those anybody has proposed before in Canada, and we're still going through the process of having difficulty getting those regulations to be fact.
I'm not arguing that they're good or bad, sufficient or insufficient. I'm saying there are very good reasons why things are not progressing on a regulatory front in Canada that have nothing to do with the debate over the science. The very good reasons, I think, jump off my page 2 in what I handed out today.
The very good reasons are that when you go to translate the theory of a target in Canada to the allocation of legally binding obligations to reduce—on the part of Canadian provinces, corporations, and individuals—you run into the same difficulty we see in Bali right now: the need to facilitate a very difficult interprovincial negotiation that has never been started by any government up to now.
I don't think that's a science denial story. We haven't put the information in place for both politicians and the people to constructively engage in the discussion that needs to take place. We need to ask whether we are asking the people of Saskatchewan to reduce more than any other people in the country, and if not, which province is going to take some of the burden off the back of Saskatchewan.
If we're not having that dialogue openly, it won't matter what target we put in any law from now on; we're still not getting anywhere.