As I say, if I talk about going forward, I'm not sure exactly how things are going to unfold and what the deputy will think I'm most beneficial to work on.
Up until now it has primarily been on the climate change file. I've been trying to understand what the issues are out there and what other jurisdictions are doing, and how what is being proposed by us and others translates itself into effects on the environment and on the economy as well. I'm just trying to piece this together in my mind, and I haven't concluded anything yet, obviously. I will probably keep those conclusions to myself for the moment. But I'm trying to understand the linkages, and in particular, at this point in time, what are some of the particular things that are happening out there in the economy in financial markets and credit markets that are maybe having an impact on what would be the most desirable environment policy.
So those have been some of the things, and obviously there's been a lot of discussion about climate change issues recently. We have a new administration in the United States, and that maybe opens up a different way of analyzing the issue.
One of the things that I do see--and you could say this globally--is that the impact of what we do here in Canada is going to be different depending on what other jurisdictions do, whether that's the United States, obviously one of our most closely aligned economic partners, or globally. With the new administration in the United States, and understanding as they find their way into what they want to do from an environmental and economic perspective, I'm thinking about how that translates into some of the things that we might or might not want to do.