All right. With respect to carbon sequestration, I'm no scientist or engineer. My background was law, so I'm waiting to be persuaded by your obvious expertise.
The concern I have is that I presume the advent of land claims throughout Alberta would surely have an effect on, if not impede, the construction of sequestration pipelines. That is clearly on the horizon now. The issue of cost proportion has yet to be resolved, and the issue of the science involved and even the methodology of capturing the carbon and putting it into the ground is a little murky—no pun intended.
Is it a bit of a false hope to say in so many words to the public that, yes, the emissions are on the rise, there's more and more carbon being spewed into the atmosphere, but don't worry, in the not too distant future we'll be capturing a lot of it, putting it into the earth, and there will be no more worries about it? Is it unrealistic to think that carbon sequestration is very close to us?