Okay, this is the last slide.
One of the things that's coming through in our research in terms of themes is this sense that there is not enough fairness when it comes to the distribution of benefits and costs of energy development. We'll need to grapple with this in a meaningful and evidence-based fashion.
The fourth thing I will point to is to beware of the literacy trap. The reason I say that is it's not uncommon, faced with challenges around public confidence, that the response—whether it's from industry or policy and regulatory decision-makers—is to say if only the public understood what we're grappling with here, they would be more supportive and confidence would be heightened. There are real limits to that literacy thesis. A lot of very interesting research is coming out right now that's demonstrating those limits, and I'd be happy to speak to them in the discussion session.
There is an opportunity for Canada to move from the bleeding edge to the leading edge on this issue. We have the largest petroleum resource base of any industrialized democracy in the world, so we are grappling with these issues on an ongoing basis and there is an opportunity here for us to move to the leading edge of that challenge.
Thank you.