If we're talking about what is being planned as a tax credit to the CCUS, then it's a direct subsidy to industry. This industry considers that the carbon emissions of what it sells on international markets are too high. It needs to find a way to reduce the carbon footprint of Canada's output in order to be competitive in a market where, at the moment, people are starting to look at the carbon emissions of everything being sold. That's why there's going to be a shift towards these technologies, particularly in the oil sector.
It's a subsidy designed to stimulate innovation and investment. But I would argue that in the oil sector in particular, and the gas sector to some degree, the decarbonization is partial. It's not a tool that will lead to good outcomes. That's the argument I'm putting forward. It's a commercial subsidy. It's a commercial policy and not an environmental policy. It's a way of intervening in the production conditions for a product we produce and sell on international markets. It is definitely not a way of moving towards carbon neutrality.