Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Mr. Hyndman, as an economist you probably are aware of the difficulties of predicting future technology, whether you look at the prediction, in the early 1960s, that the United States would go to the moon and how impossible that seemed from a technological standpoint; or whether you look at the potential consequences that we heard from industry around the Montreal Protocol on reducing CFCs for the ozone layer, which was going to cost industry tremendous amounts of money. Then they made the switch and it ended up being efficiencies and savings.
Predicting the future is very difficult in terms of what we're going to be able to innovate and solve because we're forced to think of new ways of doing things. That's one of the goals, I think, around your emphasis on pricing. If we know that things are going to get a lot more expensive, we're going to start aiming higher and force ourselves to innovate to find solutions.
Now, I appreciate your candour on the issue of pricing, on how pricing is going to be an essential element of how we're going to get to move forward to meet these climate change challenges.
Bob Page, when he came to us, talked about $100 a tonne as being the number we'd have to look for as a price on carbon with the current targets that the government has put forward.
In the different iterations of the plan we've heard over the past four years from the government, first of all, if everyone remembers, it was the “made in Canada” plan. Kyoto was made somewhere else, so we needed a made in Canada plan. Then last year we “turned the corner”, and now we've turned the corner apparently into the “made in Washington with support from Beijing” plan.
What numbers around pricing were in those previous plans? What numbers around pricing has the government indicated to you we're looking at in terms of per-tonne costs? And are you getting the predictability and stability that you're asking for out of the current government's plan--if there is one?