Yes, climate change obviously is a horizontal issue touching a number of departments and central agencies. Leadership was given at different times to Environment Canada and Natural Resources Canada on this. There was a secretariat that was reporting to the deputy ministers of both departments at one point. It was serving a purpose of federal coordination with the other departments, along with facilitation, as well as reporting. Since they've disappeared from the horizon, no one has replaced them.
Treasury Board got involved at one point. The central agencies decided to get involved when the decision was made to ratify Kyoto and all that. They decided to take more of a leadership role in terms of trying to put in place the structure that was needed. They decided to produce what's called an RMAF, a big plan, a map of all the federal programs, just to find out what exactly is going on in all these departments. Once you have this map, you then can come up and do a program review, and that's what they were trying to do.
What they also tried to do was put a system in place to capture the information that was needed in order to do proper management of the file. They wanted to know how much money has been spent on these programs overall, and what results have been achieved.
There was a program review. The results have not yet been transmitted to Parliament or to Canadians, but there's certainly a lot of information there. That was the logical sequence in which to do it, but they came in very late in the process. A number of programs were in place, but they were not talking to one another; they were not connected. They might have caused some duplication in some cases, but no one knows. The program review was the way to do this.
When we looked at this, we saw transitions going on as well—transitions between governments and the transitioning of key people in the civil service who deal with this issue. This transition of people also caused some more delays, so essentially the situation was not a clean one.
Now, when we were looking at making recommendations to the government, we wanted to make certain we were going to be addressing the recommendations to the right bodies of the government, so we were going to go to central agencies. Those central agencies told us they are not responsible for this, they are there to assist departments and ministers. Therefore, they said Environment Canada has the leadership.
That's why we have this story that is kind of complicated in the chapter.