Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I'd like to thank my colleague, Shafqat, for lending me some time.
My questions will be for Ms. Cote, the director general of environmental protection operations.
I apologize for making you come back up. I'm sorry. I ran out of time the last time.
My opening question will be more or less the same question I asked Mr. DeMarco with respect to oil and gas emissions. Like a lot of Canadians who care about fighting climate change, I've been poring over the reports, both the NIR and the report from the CESD, this week.
One of my main reflections from the net-zero accelerator is that locally—at least in Halton where I'm from—we're seeing some investments making a huge impact on our air quality. I grew up doing sports in the Halton region, and we have bad air quality in Halton, Oakville and Burlington. It's a result of being right in between Toronto and Hamilton and of having a lot of heavy industry and a lot of highways around. It got a lot better when we stopped burning coal to generate electricity in southwestern Ontario, but there's still a lot of work to be done.
When I look at the graph titled “Change in Canada's Oil and Gas Sector GHG Emissions Since 2005”, it's really obvious to me why our emissions are dragging their feet and why we haven't yet made that goal of 1990.
I also reflect on the fact that we always say that Canada's emissions are higher. It's not Canadians. It makes Canadians feel as though they're doing something wrong, and they're not. It's the oil and gas sector that's doing something wrong, and they're doing something that's obviously just generating more and more emissions per barrel of oil and gas, not even becoming more efficient over time.
With the steel industry in my area changing its ways, I'm hopeful that other industries will be able to do the same.
I'm asking for your reflection on two things. How is oil and gas contributing to us dragging our feet on reducing emissions? Also, could you correct the record for us and explain a little bit how emissions are calculated and, if you're willing, corroborate that they haven't been as low as they are now—with the exception of COVID—since 1997?
I know it's a lot.