We're venturing outside my area of primary expertise, but I never hesitate to step onto a soapbox. I think the Canadian Climate Institute has done excellent work that tries to quantify the costs of climate change to Canada specifically. Those costs are staggering, and they don't just consist of, as you have said, rising insurance costs for businesses and for homeowners, the direct costs of natural disasters, and the cost of lost livelihoods.
I'm coming to you from British Columbia. The mills that are shutting down in interior British Columbia are shutting down, at least in part and in large part, because of a lack of supply of timber. It's from forest fires, wildfires, and from the pine beetle, both of which are exacerbated by climate change. Climate change is not just an environmental issue. It's fundamentally an issue about the economic security of our country. I think that's why we're here. That is the urgency that impels measures like carbon pricing in Canada and in the EU, and it's what gives rise, then, to the border measures that try to make those measures more possible.