The way we're hoping it will be accepted is to start by the articulation of a number of principles—the open market principle, the respect for provincial jurisdictions, the focused use of federal power and federal money, the use of the sustainable or responsible development principle—and then start working our way through what I call modules. You have a nuclear module, an LNG module, a renewable fuels module.
I think what is to be decided, though, is the level of detail the ministers will be comfortable with. Unless this is a very lengthy document, it will provide parameters, for example, for the development of a renewable fuels policy or a nuclear policy. The idea, though, I think, would be to articulate principles and then provide a framework for the further development of modules dealing with subsectors.
The basic idea of this, as I'm sure you know, Mr. Chairman, is to try to provide for industry, but also for civil society, a measure of certainty, so that they have some idea of the basic policies of the government as the government moves forward over the years ahead.