Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Mr. Pushor, it seems that in the past your organization, the Alberta Energy Regulator, has often been described as captive to oil interests. I understand that there may have been something resembling a willingness to change course since your arrival, or at least to increase transparency. I would like to be convinced of that.
We have some important data, like the fact that there were 1.4 billion litres of toxic tailings in tailings ponds in 2020, but we don't know if that's real data, because it is self-reported by industry.
It's the same thing, for example, with respect to the requirement that companies had set for themselves to treat and clean up 50% of the tailings. In fact, that's only half the job; it's not even the whole job. It seems that companies have decided to stop doing that.
Earlier, representatives of indigenous groups who appeared before the committee mentioned that they felt they had been kept in the dark and that a complete breakdown in trust has occurred.
Your organization, which already has a poor reputation to begin with, has not shared information with the federal government, at least until very recently, nor has it communicated with the community. How can your organization expect us to believe that it is independent when everything looks like you have been working to try to hide the problem so that people wouldn't know about it? How will you restore your credibility?