The first one is related to Paris, very directly. As Nathan Cullen mentioned, our current target is still the one that was tabled by the previous government in May of last year. Since the Paris agreement works on the principle of ratcheting up, we know that the aggregate of all targets of all governments, if achieved, takes us to as high as 3.7 degrees Celsius above the global average temperature before the industrial revolution. It is urgent that countries begin removing their INDCs, ratcheting up, and tabling new ones.
I know you are in a tension with what the provinces are willing to take, and what businesses are ready to take, but without federal leadership in tabling a more ambitious target, how do we get other countries to withdraw their INDCs and ratchet up as well? This is my first question: When will you move the old INDC—which you have referred to as the floor—out of the way and start getting us somewhere near a ceiling?