Thanks, Mr. MacGregor.
Both the Canadian and the British Columbian governments have introduced regulations regarding methane emissions that put Canada at the forefront of efforts to reduce GHGs from oil and gas production. The B.C. government has a methane emission reduction target of 45% by 2025, relative to 2014 levels, and the Government of Canada has set an equivalent reduction target of between 40% and 45% by 2025, relative to 2012 levels.
I'll give you an example. One of LNG Canada's joint venture partners, Shell, announced a target to maintain methane emissions intensity by below 0.2% of total production by 2025. That's in line with the global standards set out by the oil and gas climate initiative, which has a target of 0.25% and a goal of 0.2% by its members.
I think we now have some tangible proof points in industry. I mentioned the electrification of Shell's Groundbirch plants. I know that among all five of my joint venture partners, the same initiative is being looked at well into the upstream. I would say we have a world-class framework. We have producers in our upstream committed to doing that. I think our performance overall is also leading, relative to other gas-producing nations.