Thank you, Chair.
Thank you for coming.
Mr. Hunt, I was born and raised in Calgary, Alberta. My father and brother were both in the extraction industry. On the other hand, my life has been spent on the ground in different third world areas, so I'm really wrestling with what's happening as this debate is going forward.
It seems to me that the more we discuss things, corporations are being presented as dragons that are going to break all sorts of laws, and NGOs are being presented in local indigenous communities as groups that would use any excuse imaginable to try to cause grief for companies. So the words “frivolous” and “vexatious” continue to come up.
I have a practical question to ask you, because I know that you know both sides of the industry.
Earlier, Mr. Beatty from the Chamber of Commerce said that what will happen to the Canadian extraction industry overseas...if this bill is passed, it will provide a competitive advantage to our other international competitors. He said that work could be done amongst NGOs in the various regions where the extraction industry is, and they could be working with NGOs on the ground to try to bring forward these frivolous and vexatious complaints. None of us have any interest in seeing that, if they're not justified, but I would like to ask you, do you think that is a real possibility? Also, if Bill C-300 were passed, would it speak to that? Would Bill C-300 have that effect?