Let me underscore the extent to which this budget truly is a green budget with a very strong emphasis on investing in the green transition. I'm glad that you're posing the question from an economic standpoint. I think it's important for us as a country to understand the green transition, of course, as a moral obligation to fight climate change, but I think we also need to understand that this is an economic imperative. The world is going green. Canada is a trading nation. We need to be sure we're in the vanguard, not left behind.
Our government has invested heavily in the green transition. We've invested nearly $100 billion in clean growth in many different ways. Some of those investments go through the SIF directly in supporting industries that are making the green transition.
I think the area you are focused on with this question is our Canada growth fund and our view that it's going to be very important to attract more private capital in the green transition. That is absolutely what the Canada growth fund will do. Our intention is that we should bring in, crowd in, $3 of private money for every $1 of public money that is invested. The reality is that the magnitude of the green economic transition is such that government funding alone will not be able to accomplish the scale of change we need, and so it is absolutely appropriate for us as a country to find ways to bring in that investment.