That's a big question that's hard to answer in short order. Let me give you some quick thoughts.
The government needs to invest in a massive way in renewable energy, but it needs to do so with a lens of creating jobs here in Canada. I'll give you an example. There are no wind turbines being installed in Canada right now that are built using Canadian steel—none. There have been attempts in Sault Ste. Marie and in Trenton, Nova Scotia, but at the moment Canada has singularly failed to connect investments in renewable energy with the need to invest and create those jobs here in Canada.
I'll give you another statistic. A tonne of steel that is imported from China has five times the carbon footprint as a tonne of steel manufactured here in Hamilton, Sault Ste. Marie or Contrecoeur, Quebec.
I agree with your premise 100%, but if we're really going to build a renewable energy economy that would actually create jobs for Canadians, we need to do in a way that would ensure that the benefits at all levels of that economy are going to Canadians and that Canadians who are currently employed in high energy sectors, like steel, can see themselves and their communities in that green energy future.