Thank you.
When I talk about what we need to do as a country to move towards a low-carbon economy and reduce our emissions, to your points, there are three major reasons.
The first is just moral. What do we need to do for future generations to protect our country? When we talk about building Canada and building it strong, it's about making sure we have a future that we can give to our children and our children's children that is low carbon and protects the planet in that way.
The second is existential. I think this goes to the part you were talking about, the costs to individuals and to communities when we're not fighting climate change. We need to continue to help protect communities from the natural disasters that we're facing. As we've seen in British Columbia and right across our country, there are more and more of these natural disasters that are creating personal costs and economic costs to individuals and to industry.
The third piece goes to what part of your question was touching on, which is the economics. The world is moving towards a low-carbon economy. As you mentioned, when we were touring around British Columbia and Burnaby in particular, we were meeting with industry and companies that saw opportunities for the future if we actually kept working to fight climate change. They saw the business opportunities. If we fall behind, they would lose those opportunities.
These are the major reasons why we need to fight climate change but also build economic opportunities. These are good-paying jobs. We saw that in Burnaby when we were touring around.