Thank you, gentlemen, for being here. I don't think I have time to cover all that I want to.
I've had an interest, actually, in rural communities, and a lot of my riding is small communities of 300 to 1,000 people, 10 miles apart from each other. I'm just wondering if what you're suggesting has any relevance for those small communities. Maybe you could talk about that after.
First, I want to come back to the question of some of the costs here. Mr. Bataille talked about the importance of full coverage of carbon pricing. I just want to talk about the implications on housing, if there are any, because many people in cities live on the edge with regard to affordable housing--young families that are working, and that kind of thing. What we've heard here—more than one group has come in and told us—is that these projects have a $150,000 premium per unit in order to build them, so the communities that have been built have that kind of a premium on the units.
In order to make these work, it seems to me, you have to raise the cost of the normal housing we have now to the level where these projects are economical or else try to bring their price down. That $100 to $200 a tonne actually drives up the cost of living and the cost of housing for everyone in order to make these projects more economical, right? I'm wondering if you have done any work on the social impact for those hundreds of thousands of people who are living on the edge of that envelope who may be driven right out of the housing market by the cost of the entire project.