If you look at the last federal budget, it seemed very focused on crowding in private sector capital. I think everybody would love to see more private sector investments in reaching net-zero emissions, but I don't think you get that by offering incremental incentives to co-fund with private individuals—which is what the greener homes program does—or financial organizations.
You see the Canada Infrastructure Bank doing that to some extent. Those are not bad, but if we really need to transform in the way that the net-zero objective requires, we need our public sector investments to really almost reshape the structure of markets so that it's just a no-brainer for the private sector to see energy retrofits as a productive area for investment and innovation.
This strategy that we've written about in connecting the demand and the supply side, reshaping demand to be at very high scale and then negotiating how we meet that demand with private sector partners, is the type of structural change we can do. You only get there when you really start investing at scale and retrofitting at scale.