In our exhibits in this year's report and last year's report, we use the two baselines of 1990 and 2005, 1990 being the baseline year for the UN convention and 2005 being the baseline year for Canada's current NDC for the 2030 target. However, if you look at more recent data—essentially, if you put in another graph for just the last few years—you will see a drop in Canada that is not as bad relative to the other G7 countries as it is if you look at these two baseline years. That's partly not that surprising because many of those countries made deep reductions already, so they're now at the point where it's difficult to do further reductions. Canada didn't do any reductions since 1990. Its emissions are up, so it still has the ability to bring it down, more of an ability to bring it down in absolute terms than some of those other countries. I would have to look at the various factors involved to see exactly why there have been changes.
The long and the short of it is that we're only down by around 7% or 8% since the 2005 level. We have to get to 40% to 45% in just six years, so there's a long way to go.