That's a very important question and issue for the Government of Canada.
I'll start where you started with some of the critiques about the cap. I'll reiterate that the intended focus of the measure is on emissions. It is our intention, as you will see in the draft regulations, that the focus is on constraining emissions and not on dictating where oil and gas gets produced or, indeed, how it gets produced, so long as the sector is able to reduce emissions over time.
As is the case with the government's overall approach to decarbonizing the economy and moving towards net zero, the government's approach to decarbonizing the oil and gas sector involves a suite of measures. At its foundation, of course, is carbon pricing, and then in some cases there are additional regulatory measures established, primarily either where pricing won't send the right signal or where it won't send the signal adequately because of the trajectory of the sector.
In addition to regulatory measures for which Environment and Climate Change Canada is the lead, the government deploys, as you mentioned, a number of other measures, including investment tax credits and direct financial contributions from the net-zero accelerator, etc.