Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you to the witnesses.
I'd like to ask some questions of Ms. Livingstone and Mr. Frey around data and the usability of data. In my previous life, we had remote machine condition monitoring that we put on machines around Canada. We would get a text message if a paper machine in Alberta was running too hot. We would get another message from an oil rig in Dubai to say that the vibration was excessive.
So there are ways to monitor things but to then also get notifications when data is showing that a condition has changed to the point where somebody needs to pay attention.
We asked Imperial Oil to give us data on the wells up in Kearl, where there was a spill. They gave us pages and pages of columns and rows of data—just numbers. It wasn't usable to us or anybody else. The Alberta Energy Regulator was supposed to get a report when things were out of condition. We were supposed to get a report when things were out of condition. No report happened.
When we talk about data and usability, Ms. Livingstone or Ms. Holman, is that something we could reasonably expect if we asked for it—to have usable data?