Okay. Thank you very much.
I think you might find the answer in the fact that this investment is being run through the Canada Account, which does not relieve taxpayers of the burden of that money, but it does relieve the government of the obligation to record that expenditure where everyone can see it and apply it to the numbers that we study here at this committee.
Notwithstanding the fact that this project continues to accumulate a larger expense for Canadian taxpayers—and I think many are now of the view that not only is it going to cost Canadian taxpayers more, but that the discount at which the government will end up selling that pipeline continues to increase—those findings and those numbers never reach this table. They don't reach the government operations committee table. There is no table in Parliament where those numbers land as a matter of course for study or deliberation.
I note that if you add about $22 billion to the $54 billion, the government windfall is essentially completely spent. Approximately a third of that expenditure is on the TMX pipeline. We make a big deal about the $54 billion, but I think the bigger deal that doesn't get talked about enough is the fact that almost another half of that again is being pumped into the TMX pipeline. It's hardly ever talked about here in Parliament because of what I would characterize as accounting tricks by the government.
I won't ask you for comment on that, but I will thank the committee for the opportunity to put that on the record.
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.