Here's another thing. It's actually an interesting consequence. When you input carbon pricing, you're raising the price of carbon, and this unleashes certain innovations, which is what I think the government intended to do. One innovation, which was planned previously at the Keephills plant, near my riding, was to input carbon capture sequestration technology. The pioneer project, as it was called, was later abandoned because the company said there is no carbon tax and so there's really no reason. Then when you have a carbon tax, it creates an incentive to keep that coal plant running, with carbon capture. However, when you put a ban on coal for 2030, at a plant that can reduce emissions by a million tonnes at one plant, which is about a 30% reduction of what that one facility had, it really reduces your innovation.
Do you have any comments on that? When you have a carbon price combined with regulations, that can actually stifle innovation in some ways.