Thanks, Mr. Chair.
Thank you very much for coming.
I am going to continue to ask and explore questions I began last meeting to try to understand how the work you are doing here links to Canada's overall responsibilities and commitments on greenhouse gases.
I didn't hear the words, Mr. Gray, in any presentation. In fact, they are not in print. I didn't hear the words “climate change” or “greenhouse gases”. Canadians understand that the magnitude of opportunity in Canada's north and Canada's south is remarkable when it comes to natural resources. We all understand that. We are looking at $2 billion alone for drilling investments in the Beaufort Sea, despite the fact that we haven't got a proper boom system to contain any kind of spill. But that's another issue.
I want to get as much insight as I can from you and your team. You are doing a lot of fabulous work and mapping. You are basically identifying the magnitude of opportunity and to a certain extent the challenges inherent in exploiting these resources.
I am trying to overcome what is a continuous fiction in Canada, and particularly with this government, that you can dissociate, for example, our responsibilities with greenhouse gas reductions and this massive investment in resource exploitation.
You talked about an advisor group of northerners. You talked about aboriginal communities. In preparation for this meeting, I was just leafing through the circumpolar Inuit declaration on resource development principles in Inuit Nunaat, in which they described climate change under the terms of global environmental security. They go on to talk about it in great detail, which reminded me of the chairman of the United States Joint Chiefs of Staff, who, relying on CIA and military research, gave a major speech two years ago in Washington and declared climate change was the number one threat to global security going forward.
I'm trying to get a sense of how your work connects, for example, with the government's promise that in eight and a half years we're going to reduce overall greenhouse gas emissions by 17% from 2005 levels. That is question number one. Is it connected? What overarching influence does that commitment have on your work and your good investigative research to explore and find all of this opportunity for us? To what extent is it connected? Do you have a connection? We have no national energy strategy in the country, despite the calls over and over by CAPP and other oil and gas producers, for one. It puts you in a tough spot, but how are you linking this in your good work? Or are you?