It's a tough question to answer with hard evidence. I say that because part and parcel of acting on climate change when you're an economy like Alberta, which is exposed to the global investment climate, which is exposed to the global market, is, on the one hand, making sure that you maintain our competitiveness, and, on the other hand, making sure we maintain access to capital. I direct you to comments by Mark Carney from the Bank of England as a primary example of this. Mark Carney has stated that companies, lenders, insurers, and all of the finance areas, which are so important to an open economy like Alberta's, have become much more concerned with the question of climate change.
As other members of this panel will certainly know, in Alberta, we've fought against misinformation campaigns against our industry, etc. A lot of those campaigns were rooted in a perception that Alberta's economy was incompatible with action on climate change. Instead of stepping forward to say that we could not act on climate change because of our industry, we were able to step forward to say that our industry can act on climate change, why can't yours? We put that challenge forward to the world, and we're seeing that play out now, obviously with some roadblocks and speed bumps. That is something for which you can't necessarily go back with hindsight and say what would have happened without action, although I think action was imperative for Alberta.