Definitely those three policies that I just mentioned are kind of excellent policies. For the UK and the U.S., they're whole-of-government approaches, so, for us, EDC is by far the largest source of public finance, but there are other agencies that give smaller amounts.
A whole-of-government approach that fires that going forward is needed, as are exclusions of future government-backed finance for fossil fuels, including oil and gas, CCS gas and hydrogen. Alongside that, there should also be, I think, scope for alignment with Canada's overall net-zero alignment. Therefore, for EDC, the priority should be having a portfolio approach aligned with 1.5o, looking at preventing carbon lock-in at the production level. Beyond that, there's lots of scope for these Crown corporations to instead support transition, so we should look at cross-support portfolios across all sectors to see how our public finances support a just transition that protects workers and communities rather than locking in climate chaos.