Thank you very much.
Let me go very quickly. You've touched a number of issues.
First of all, with respect to nuclear, we increased their budget by 9%. We had to actually add $94 million. A large portion of it went to the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission.
I want to stress that our government is promoting renewable energy with $1.5 billion for things such as wind, solar, tidal, biomass. The $1.5 billion is a production incentive for that renewable energy. But we are seeing increased activity in both the refurbishment of and in new nuclear builds. Here in Ontario we're seeing it, and we're hearing about other parts of the country where there's an interest.
Our job as the federal government, as the regulator, is to ensure that all aspects of the environmental approval process, the safety aspects when they go through the Canadian environmental assessments—all of that—would be done by the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission. They will absolutely need these resources to complete that work.
Just to put it in perspective, we haven't seen an application in this country to build a nuclear reactor in three or four decades, and we're seeing a lot of activity now. We have a responsibility to ensure the safety and ensure, when they go through the regulatory approval process, that the resources are there to have a comprehensive, thorough review, so that no stones are left unturned.
Nuclear is only one form of energy. We're blessed with many forms of energy in this country, and it's really up to the provinces to decide on their energy mix. Places such as Quebec, your province, or my province of British Columbia, are blessed with a lot of hydro electricity, which is a very clean form of energy. Not all other provinces have that opportunity, and thus are looking at other sources. So we had to put those resources in.
With respect to the light bulb, the story I told about the company Group IV Semiconductor actually wasn't about LED but about solid-state lighting. We've invested $1.2 million in the development of a very efficient way of lighting. We're quite enthusiastic about it. We'll continue to support these types of initiatives.
With respect to banning inefficient light bulbs, 5% of the energy used in North America—you can translate that back into Canada—is used in lighting. We can revolutionize the way we light up our country. The amount of energy savings is enormous.
I would encourage you to go out and buy energy-efficient lighting. It may not necessarily be compact flourescents. As I say, there will be incandescent light bulbs coming on the market in the coming years that are as efficient as compact flourescents. They're coming; I think we should be open to that fact.
The numbers speak for themselves. There is lighting available today that uses 20% of the power of an inefficient light bulb. If we add that up across the country, we're literally talking about five or six or seven coal-fired electricity generation units.
We'd be happy to share those numbers with you. I don't come up with these numbers; these are from scientists, independents. And this is really easy math to do; this number has been calculated.
So this is a really simply fix, and the most exciting part is that by putting these regulations in place, we're really pushing the industry, people like Philips and GE, to accelerate their investments and develop the most energy-efficient lighting.
We all need to look at the energy we consume. We can't just continue to blame it on everybody else and say it's the refineries or it's the oil companies. Every drop they produce, you and I use.