Thank you.
I don't have a personal opinion on this, but my understanding of the research is that the oil sands provide an increasingly small economic contribution to Canada. The oil and gas sector has been shedding job opportunities voluntarily for many years—actually before climate policy even really began at the federal or provincial level.
It has been shedding workers and communities who devoted their lives to the industry in efforts to perhaps consolidate operations. In essence, it has been making an increasingly small contribution to the real benefit of Canada's economy and workforce, etc.
The emissions from the oil and gas sector are obviously quite harmful. The environmental impacts from the oil and gas sector are obviously quite harmful if we consider the toxic waste-water leaks that have happened from large oil and gas companies, which were revealed earlier this year.
I would highlight all of those points and reiterate what I shared before about this sunk-cost fallacy. Yes, that has been part of the economy of Canada for many years, but in fact all of our competitors—many of whom other witnesses mentioned, including Asian economies—are actually moving much faster towards the climate transition. China is the fastest installer of renewable solar energy. It is the fastest innovator in green technologies—to the extent that Canada is already falling behind.
I very much encourage policies that ensure we create job opportunities and economic opportunities in the obvious contemporary green economy rather than the anachronistic one that no longer serves us.