Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I would also like to thank my colleague.
My questions will be along the same lines as those I asked the minister.
We've had some great conversations at this committee about using carbon pricing as a tool to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. If, as my colleague mentioned earlier, a decision were made to use only technology, I would be curious to see what happened next. I've done some research and read some pretty interesting reports that have come out from international organizations such as the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. These reports looked at how much Canada would need to invest in technology to be able to meet its targets without using carbon pricing. Investments in green technologies would need to be anywhere from $30 billion to $60 billion a year. That would triple Canada's deficit. In other words, using investments in green technologies instead of the carbon tax would triple the Canadian deficit.
Where would the money come from to do that? Should personal income taxes be increased? I don't know how we would go about getting that money. However, that is one way of doing things.
Most countries and major economies in the world simply use market forces to achieve that result at no cost to taxpayers, who receive a rebate. Before choosing this method, did your department study the option of investing in green technologies and tripling Canada's deficit instead of relying on market forces?