You understand the paradox. You're telling me that we need to take money from the government's Consolidated Revenue Fund and use it for something extremely good. I support you entirely and we agree on this. However, the problem is that this money could be accessed more easily by internalizing the real cost of the tar sands. What's more, the tar sands are currently skewing the value of our money, because the price that we're paying isn't real. So, I think we're going down the wrong track by not having a comprehensive approach which takes all these factors into account.
Obviously, having worked in this field for quite some time, I observe the same things that you do. We need to focus on clean, renewable energy. And at the same time, the best way to get this money is not, in my opinion, to dig into the government's Consolidated Revenue Fund, but rather by internalizing the costs to future generations of what amounts to a preposterous exploitation of a source of wealth that we have at our disposal but that we are managing very poorly.