I'm happy to.
What I can comment on is some of the work that the net-zero advisory body had done. Among the key things we tried to advise the government on last year.... Again, this is a report that I sent to the Prime Minister's Office and the energy minister's office, and I got no feedback on it. They didn't request it, but I offered a briefing on behalf of the net-zero advisory body.
Among the modelling we did—we did this work with the Canadian Climate Institute—we looked at the industrial pricing system and how you could tighten it to make it work better, which this deal that's been arranged has failed to do. We also tested other policies that would make a lot of sense, like building programs.
For example, here in British Columbia, the zero-carbon step code is probably the state of the art for building codes. In the modelling, we tested what would happen if you adopted that across the country, and we gave some advice around that. We also tested the idea of having consumer incentives for heat pumps, particularly for low-income households. Those are in the models, and they basically came at little economic cost to the government but, by 2035, with a pretty good bang for your buck in terms of emissions reductions.
Again, this is advice that was there. There was no conversation about it, and there was no response from the government.
