Thank you, MP Longfield.
I'll start off by saying that I appreciate the end framing of taxonomy and the Bank of Canada. I think it's very important to look much broader. The taxonomy is one piece of policy that has gotten quite a bit of discussion, and the Bank of Canada is one financial regulator. I think, when looking at all of the pieces within the package of CAFA, including many that you mentioned, including transition plans and updating the mandates of regulators so that they can hold accountability and can evaluate risk on climate change, that much broader package of policies for coherent progress on climate-aligned finances is what I would encourage the committee to consider.
Regulators in Canada, including the main federal financial regulator, OSFI, and the Bank of Canada, have studied the significant risks of moving too slowly on climate transition. They've highlighted that billions of dollars are at risk of vanishing, essentially, of being lost in the financial institution if they move too slowly on climate change and if the policy environment moves too slowly on climate change.
In moving forward with climate-related financial policies, like transition plans, like all of those mentioned and the other ones mentioned in CAFA, it's very important to create lines of accountability. To ensure the effectiveness of policy and regulation, you need oversight on those, just like in any other policy. That's why modernizing the mandates of financial regulators is such an important piece.
I'll highlight that other jurisdictions have moved forward with that as a core part of not just their climate strategy but also their financial strategy. The European Union, as part of their green deal, introduced a package of climate-related financial policies, including clarifying the roles of regulators to oversee the new climate-related policies they're putting forward.