There's a lot there, so I'll try to touch on the key points.
The notion of waiting until there's complete unanimity or whether the definition is ready.... The planet is heating up as we speak, so we can't always wait. It was in 2009 that Canada committed to phasing out inefficient fossil fuel subsidies. We're now in 2022 and we are still talking about the definition, so there's something wrong with that picture in terms of the pace of action.
Regarding Canada's being blessed with energy resources, it's blessed with a wide array of energy resources, not just fossil fuels. If we're going to move toward net zero, the answer isn't only going to be from the oil and gas industry to working on further oil and gas; it's also going to be in diversifying our energy base. This will also have the co-benefit of increasing energy security. That is something that countries around the world are looking at because of the crisis in Ukraine and the need to have more dispersed energy production, rather than relying on imports and so on.
It's important to work together on all of this, but we can't forget that there is only so much greenhouse gas budget that we have in the world. If we keep producing oil and gas with emissions here from production and emissions when they're combusted for the exports overseas, we will break that budget. We have to come to that realization at some point, before it's too late. That's what the IPCC is trying to tell us with its report yesterday. To meet 1.5ยบ, we have to make some of these hard decisions sooner rather than later.