I'll try to summarize a couple of thoughts around the comments from Mr. Godin.
One, a carbon tax is not a silver bullet. We're at a point where we need all hands on deck, and all solutions we can come up with to get to the solution that you talked about, a 1.5-degree future by 2050.
I also think that it's a mischaracterization of the IPCC special report and the science around climate change that emission reductions are going to get us to that target. IPCC, in its special report, actually said that one of the astounding factors is that in any scenario to get to 1.5 degrees, we have to reduce to a zero-emission future, and come up with carbon dioxide reduction strategies, which essentially means to suck carbon out of the atmosphere.
The only large-scale carbon dioxide reduction strategy in the world, as we know it, is nature. Natural climate solutions can make up to 30% of the solution to suck carbon out of the atmosphere and get us to that future.
There is advancement in the private sector companies that we work with on lowering their emissions in technology, but that's not going to get us to the solution. Lower emissions and fossil fuel extraction are not going to get us to our goals. We need investment in technology that gets us to zero, and net positive emissions in order to meet the goals that we've set for ourselves and to hit the targets.
I'll lean a little bit into some of the conversation from the other interviewer. Canada is well positioned, in both the private space and the public space, to invest in those natural climate solutions. That's going to be a great way for us to come up with some of the technological capacity and technical solutions in order to get to the goal.
There is no way that by 2030 we're going to come up with large-scale carbon capture and storage technology, from an industrial perspective, even though all the fossil fuel companies in the world that I know of are working hard on that. We're going to get there by investing in reforestation, protecting forests, helping indigenous people in the Amazon, and protecting the largest carbon sinks we have on our planet.