I'm happy to have a first crack at that.
As Madame Le Quéré indicated, there is a great challenge ahead of Canada to basically reverse the current trend from emissions increase to emissions decrease. In that context, I think the contribution that could be made by an independent officer of Parliament who had a budget and ability to hire expert advice would be invaluable.
The constraints that are sadly imposed on the Auditor General are imposed as well on the commissioner. The Auditor General does not have a budget that allows her to do her work. Leaving the commissioner for the environment under the Auditor General ensures that the current insufficiency of resources that applies generally to the Auditor General continues to apply to the commissioner for the environment.
With the inability to hire sufficient staff, with the inability to carry out the appropriate audits and verifications, let alone the inability to make any policy recommendations on a go-forward basis, the commissioner is really not contributing much in terms of helping Canada in its challenge of meeting its international commitments to greenhouse gas emission reductions.