First of all, just to clarify, I'm not saying that the oil and gas activity would cease. I'm saying that it would phase out over a couple of decades.
I also want to clarify that I'm not saying that the work of the transfer agencies would be governed by the provincial government in each of those places. I'm saying that it would be governed by a joint governance body, one that includes the federal government, the provincial government, municipal governments, indigenous governments and so on, but mostly that those local governance groups could determine an investment package that speaks to the reality of the GHG profiles in that province and the labour market realities in that province.
In Alberta and Saskatchewan, it's obviously going to focus in particular around transition from oil and gas. In Ontario, it may be investments in retooling auto lines to get them fully electrified. In other places, it may be about driving the transformation of the agricultural sector. It depends what the realities are. You would want to have a body that is making investments aligned with the fastest, most ambitious path to drive down emissions in that province.