Thank you, Mr. Chair, and welcome to everybody this afternoon.
I apologize for the Blackberry. It's a bit of a cultural shift for me, seeing that blackberries are usually better in puddings and buns in Labrador than they are ringing next to your ear. That having been said, I'm glad you're here.
I have a couple of comments, first of all. I was in a community of about 250 people this summer, and one of the elders in the community was telling me there's less ice, less sea ice, and this is something that has been going on for years now, and that type of thing. He was saying they were going to have to change their snowmobile trails. I was thinking at that particular point that if they had to do that, it would cost more money because they'll have to build them over land instead of across sea ice. It's going to take more time for the movement of goods and services.
It struck me at that particular time how important this whole issue is, and how it affects people in a community of 250, and how they are becoming in tune with not only a local, regional, or national problem, but an international problem and challenge.
In that context, I am wondering with respect to the Kyoto Protocol and the targets that were set out, what's your assessment of how important those protocols are, those international targets that have been set and Canada attaining those particular protocols and targets? There is some talk of a made-in-Canada solution, and I don't see it as only a Canada challenge. It is something that the global community has to address as well, isn't it?
I am wondering about this because the current government seems to think the Kyoto Protocol is not that important.