What was the population of Canada, approximately, in the year that we're attributing this 3% reduction to? Actually, what was the year, and I can just look it up? I think it's relevant.
You know, when I look at the curve and the change in trajectory that we've seen in the past six to eight years with respect to our emissions profile, notwithstanding the fact that Canada's population has grown quite significantly since the mid-1990s....
There are two things that I meant to ask in my question, prior to being a little bit thrown off by the previous answer. First, it seems as though this committee has been hung up on two things with respect to carbon pricing. There's the effectiveness of carbon pricing to lower emissions, and there's the ability of the Canada carbon rebate to make eight out of 10 families whole or more than whole with respect to the cost of the carbon price.
There are 300 economists—more than that now, actually—who have signed on to a letter referencing five or six key points that have been, frankly, misleading Canadians over the past couple of months in the Conservatives' campaign against carbon pricing. I'm curious to know if you're aware of any economists out there in the ecosystem who have signed a joint letter to the contrary. Quite frankly, I've looked for them. I've looked for evidence to the contrary, and it doesn't seem like there's a consortium or even a small group of economists who are suggesting that Canada's carbon pricing doesn't work. In fact, the guy who won a Nobel Prize says we're getting it right.