We undertook an analytical process in order to define and to support decision-making by the government on the post-2020 target. As part of that process, I engaged with my counterparts in the provinces and territories to understand better the measures, the specific measures, that they were implementing or planning to implement under their own climate plans. It was in that regard that the minister also wrote to seek that information.
As I mentioned in my earlier remarks, we have an analytical tool, a modelling tool, that we use—and we publish the results every year—that supports policy-making in this area, and we have a long history of working with the provinces in order to support that. That's important because it also supports us in meeting our reporting obligations to the UNFCCC in terms of our national reporting and the new biennial reports that we produce.
What we learned from that process was that the measures that were captured in our 2014 report and our last biennial report to the United Nations were in fact the measures that were currently in place, but some jurisdictions in the subsequent months did indicate that they were examining new measures or were taking a fresh look at their domestic climate targets. For example, Ontario announced, as you may know, that they will implement a cap and trade system, and I think they have now announced as well a specific 2030 target. The precise regulatory details we have yet to see.