I would like to thank the witnesses for being here today.
As you may have heard earlier, I'm filling in for my colleague, who is the environment critic for our party, but I'm the climate change critic for our party, so this is an issue that I'm very interested in. I am very concerned about what has happened in Alberta, so thank you for coming forward and explaining it to us. The people who are affected by these events deserve an explanation.
Mr. Corson, I heard a lot of apologies in your opening remarks, a mea culpa, and a willingness to do better next time. You seem to blame it mostly on a lack of communication. Perhaps you don't take enough responsibility for the events. In this sense, I wonder if you consider that your company has a legal and moral responsibility towards the communities that suffer the consequences of this technical irresponsibility.
Do you or do you not consider that you have a moral and legal obligation? If so, what agreements do you rely on? Are there any agreements or internal documents that prove this? Do you have agreements with the different communities that give you this responsibility, but also the responsibility to inform them when events such as those that have happened in the last few months occur?