Certainly the criteria for measuring the effectiveness of any one program are very much linked to that particular program. We're sitting before you today representing a real range of different program types. In an incentive program, we would look at the effectiveness not just of the dollars per tonne; it's also how many resources in the Government of Canada are required to process the applications but provide due diligence for the Canadian taxpayer that the investment has actually taken place.
So we look at the effectiveness of how long it takes us to respond to an application and to process it through the federal government, and how long it takes us to respond to questions from the public and to deal with their application.
That's very different from the effectiveness requirements of preparing a regulation or a standard where we don't have the same response to the individual consumers but where we do have to take into account the impact on the economy of imposing a regulation, how long industry has to respond to that regulation, and whether we are consulting adequately.
There are different effectiveness criteria we would apply to a regulatory program than we would to an incentive program. Each individual evaluation looks at each individual program and develops the specific criteria for evaluation. I've just given you a couple of examples for two different programs.