Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I love it when your parliamentary secretary is the guy who asks you the toughest questions on chrysotile and targets. There's no holding back from him.
Just let me tell you briefly that on chrysotile--and you and I have spoken many times, as many committee members are aware, on this file--again, the position of the Government of Canada is that we promote its safe use. I'm aware of all the various studies. We have asked that a comparative analysis be done between the man-made fibres and chrysotile, because any decisions that we make will be made based on sound science. That's where we stand. We support the industry on its safe use, and that's our position as the government.
You also mentioned targets in the Clean Air Act and in the notice of intent. I think it's worthwhile to expand on this. Let me start off with the long-term target. We've heard a lot of people and our opponents say we won't do anything until 2050.
Mr. Chair, that is absolutely not true. Every single person in this room knows that if we're going to achieve those targets of 50% or 60% reductions, we must start today. You can't start in five years. You can't start in 10 years. These are ambitious, aggressive targets. You cannot wait.
So to suggest that nothing will be done until 2050 is absolute ludicrousness, Mr. Chair. It is happening now.
On the short- and medium-term targets, we absolutely will come up with targets. But we're not going to pull them out of thin air. We're not going to roll the dice and see if a six pops up and say that's our number. We're going to consult with every single sector, from the automotive, to the oil and gas, to the mining, to the forestry, to the electricity sector. We're going to work with them, and we're going to come up with tough targets that they haven't seen before. They will be realistic, they will be achievable, and they're going to be enforced. You will see these targets come out in the next year, which is just around the corner.
It's kind of scary when you think how close Christmas is. My kids are reminding me of that every day when I call. That always signals to me that the end of the year is coming nearer.
We're almost into the next year, and we're consulting now. We are consulting on a regular basis at the official level and at the ministerial level. These targets will be real. There will be meaningful, aggressive greenhouse gas and pollutants reductions, something this country has never seen before in its history. We should be proud that we have a government that is prepared to take on every single sector and be ambitious.
I know that for political reasons some people like to suggest otherwise. As we saw when Mr. Mulroney brought in the acid rain treaty in the late 1980s, almost 20 years ago, the very same people criticized him. They said that he was doing nothing, that there were no targets, that it wouldn't work, that it wasn't fast enough. Those very same people who criticized him then gave him an award this year for being the greenest Prime Minister in the history of Canada, greener than Jean Chrétien, greener than Paul Martin. He was far more successful on environmental files than any other Prime Minister in the history of Canada. The same people are criticizing us with the same talking points they used to criticize him almost 20 years ago.
I can tell you that our government takes this file very seriously. You will see greenhouse gas reductions. There will be short- and medium-term targets, but they are going to be real. They're not going to be made up out of thin air. And they're going to be enforced.