Thank you very much, Ms. Taylor Roy. I also appreciate the fact that you asked your question in French.
Mr. Chair, I know I jumped in, but I would like to answer that right away.
Yes, in fact, Ms. Taylor Roy is right. The environment is not under the exclusive jurisdiction of one order of government. It is under shared jurisdiction, which is why it is important to look after the watershed, which has nothing to do with the biblical parting of the waters. We have to recognize that some things fall under provincial jurisdiction, while others are under federal jurisdiction.
In the specific case of Mr. van Koeverden's motion, the matter is under direct provincial jurisdiction. At the end of the motion, there are five requests. Let us set aside the last one, which concludes by saying that this should be part of our work. The four others pertain exclusively to Alberta's energy regulator, which is mentioned very directly and specifically.
We're talking about Alberta. We're not talking about Canada. We're not talking about federal jurisdiction. We're not talking about the House of Commons. We're not talking about the federal committee of environment and climate change issues. We're talking about Alberta.
Guys, if you want to run in Alberta, good luck, but this is the House of Commons of Canada.