Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Supplementary Estimates (C), 2021‑22, contains 46 horizontal items, which is gigantic. That is not necessarily bad news, because it means that the departments are collaborating with one another. I was pleased with some of those government items, but I also found them shocking.
That is the case for the following horizontal item in particular. Out of $654 million, $647 million is going to the Department of Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development for operating expenses relating to climate change mitigation measures in developing countries. So $647 million is going to that department for operating expenses—that's fine—but also for grants and contributions for international climate finance mechanisms and financial institutions, and projects to promote adaptation to climate change and development of governance capacity.
I have to say that I wondered. I mean, $647 million out of $654 million is really a big piece of the pie. I wondered what proportion of that $647 million was allocated to international financial mechanisms and financial institutions in comparison to the proportion allocated to the projects themselves. I didn't know that international financial institutions needed grants and contributions from Canada. That was a surprise to me.
When we talk about development of governance capacity, whose capacity is that, and for what?