There are several areas.
We really don't have any energy policies in this country. We are woefully inadequate in regard to energy policy, so you have a lot of energy policy driven by environmental policy, which is not a bad thing except that it has consequences.
Just as an example, if you want to shift to natural gas as a vehicle for producing electricity because it has a lower environmental footprint, that is our feedstock. Natural gas is our feedstock. That shift means the price of natural gas would go up, because an electricity generating facility can consume one heck of a lot of natural gas. So it would be in short supply. Natural gas is the key feedstock for our plants in Alberta.
So we have to think more broadly about electricity policy and energy policy in terms of maximizing the potential for the economy. Nuclear is an example of that. Also, energy policy is an area where you have a lot of balkanization between provinces and the federal government, with federal government playing a small to non-existent role, which is a result of the NEP fiasco, I guess. That's one area.
Secondly, there are regulatory issues. Increasingly, there are major overlaps and duplication between federal and provincial governments. A good example of this is that the Ontario government right now is pursuing a toxic chemicals management program, which is fine—we have to manage these things—but they've designed the program to basically ignore the federal program.
This is going to put our plants and our companies in a situation whereby one province will have one set of rules for managing toxic chemicals and another will have another set of rules. At some point, this adds costs, significant costs. You don't know what the rules are, what the signals are, what the thresholds are, or whatever, so you have tremendous difficulties in regulatory areas.
The climate change area is another one. Right now, B.C. has a carbon tax, Quebec has a carbon tax, others are involved in the western climate initiative, the federal government's doing this, and Ontario thinks it should be ahead of everybody else. We have to harmonize with the U.S., and while I totally agree with Mr. Prentice's direction on that, the fact is that we have a pretty mixed bag right now.
On rail policy, we think improvements can be made. There is rail service review that needs to be done. Rail is critical to our industry. We think there is a need for better competition in rail and better service.
So you can go through a lot of areas, including infrastructure and border issues. I think a lot of progress has been made on the border issues, but the border is so big an issue. With just a little hiccup at the border, our economy suffers hugely. So a lot of work needs to be done on the border. I think the government has done some of that with infrastructure and the speedier movement of goods, but more needs to be done.
There are a lot of policy areas where, if we put all these things together with tax and trade, we could increase the efficiency of our economy quite substantially and improve the possibility of manufacturing being able to compete globally.