I certainly appreciate that. I know the minister has been working on it, but we will, as parliamentarians, follow up as well. There are members on this committee who are members of the Canada-U.S committee. We can certainly raise that as well.
My second issue I want to raise is with Enbridge and the Canadian Electricity Association. First of all, thank you for the work you're doing, certainly with respect to renewable and with the utilization of heat and waste energy. I think that's absolutely excellent.
I'm going to poise a challenge, because you're both asking for credit or tax changes of some kind, the investment tax credit with Enbridge and with the carbon capture and storage technology in terms of accelerated capital cost allowance rates. When I'm in Alberta, my friends back home ask me why we are so hard on the energy sector in terms of regulations with respect to our greenhouse gas emissions. When we're here in Ottawa—and you can watch this in question period in about 15 minutes—frankly, as a government, we get heavily criticized for not doing enough. So the political challenge here is having three political parties saying that we should not give subsidies or credits or these things to companies and we ought to use regulations to force these companies to do this on their own. I want you to sort of answer that political question for me, because that's the question certainly that we get as a government each and every day.
Perhaps we'll start with Enbridge and then go to the Canadian Electricity Association.