Okay, that is true. I know that Alberta has said it will reduce 40% or something, I think, of methane emissions, but it's well known that this is based on under-reporting, and it's not even actually monitoring yet.
You raised last fall a really important matter. It goes to your overall issue about accountability.
I and a number of people in Canada have been following what the U.K. and Germany have done. The United Kingdom actually enacted in law its targets. I think that every five years it sets another percentage reduction target. It has established an independent commission, headed by a former Edmontonian, that advises on how to meet the next round of targets, and then audits and publicly reports.
Would you want to speak to whether that kind of mechanism at the federal level might help us better track what is going on federally, and then additionally provincially and territorially?