Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Thank you to the witnesses.
This is a brief response to something that Mr. Poilievre put before us, which was the claim that LNG Canada didn't have any government subsidies.
I'll just correct you, Pierre. There's $5.3 billion in subsidies from the Government of British Columbia, plus $275 million in direct subsidies from the Government of Canada, plus a $1-billion tariff waiver issued by Bill Morneau so the company doesn't have to buy Canadian steel and aluminum.
By the way, of the advertised 10,000 jobs in building that facility, 5,500 of them will be in China at a construction facility at Zhuhai, which is in Guangdong province. The construction is being done by a consortium of a Texas-based company, Fluor, and a Japan-based company called JGC, and they've managed to move the fabrication out of Canada and into China. I know how much you like funding projects in the People's Republic of China, so I just thought I'd make sure you had that.
Turning to our witnesses from the infrastructure development bank, I'm very interested in knowing more about how you're structuring projects in infrastructure in interties. I understand that you can't fund the publicly funded grid, such as Manitoba Hydro, but you can support the development of interties, which are much needed to ensure we have an effective national grid. Are other projects with interties in the works? Is it part of a larger concept?
I'd really love to hear from whoever feels equipped to speak to that.