Yes. I have another concern from the other side of this equation, and it may be I'm seeing the glass half full, as opposed to the glass half empty.
Is there any concern that businesses that adapt and reduce energy costs and are incentivized to address climate change by reducing their carbon footprint, their electricity consumption, all of those things, or by changing the way they do business, and they drop their costs, such that...? I don't park downtown in Toronto very often, because it's $20, so I take the subway. But if parking was $2, I would probably drive, so I have adapted my abilities.
The businesses in my riding of Don Valley West may be different from other ridings. They're really smart and they're always cutting costs and they're always looking for.... They're also socially very responsible. They're attempting very much to address the problem of climate change and pollution, so they're dropping their costs.
Is there any guarantee they won't be oversubsidized, that the government won't give them too much money because they've dropped their costs so much?