The one I'm most familiar with, because I do a lot of work on indigenous economic development, is the one that Mr. Buffalo referred to: the site rehabilitation program. As he said, they are a shining success. It has reduced methane, and created jobs and economic opportunity for first nations in Alberta and Saskatchewan, as well as in Ontario. Some of the money went to cleaning up some wells in Ontario on reserve from the 1860s around “Petroleum”. I believe the town is called “Petroleum” in Ontario.
Again, the idea that a tax credit going to an oil and gas company makes it bad, when it's such a huge part of economy.... The idea that you can have this transition without including the oil and gas sector, with the expertise they have in pipelines....
When pipelines aren't filled with oil and natural gas, they're going to have to be filled with hydrogen. We're still going to need pipelines, and we're still going to need to have this expertise in how you bring energy to billions of customers. Removing the fossil fuel sector from the Canadian economy is not a realistic or a desirable proposition for the climate or the economy.