Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I was really intrigued by some of your comments, Mr. Love, as well as by yours, Ms. Bak. This study is on de-risking the adoption of clean technology in Canada's natural resources sector. I'm a big believer in a fair playing field, and I agree with something you said earlier, which was the idea that we need to develop these technologies without pitting one side of the sector against the other. Some of what I hear from witnesses—not necessarily you guys, but in general—is in fact doing that. Unintentionally it pits one side of the sector against the other.
I come from agriculture, so I always use agricultural analogies. I believe in broad-based policy and I believe 100% that we need to be pushing for technologies based on the idea that we have a goal we want to get to, and then developing the sector so that it meets those goals. I agree 100% with that.
This means to me, however, that if I'm a tractor manufacturer and determine that I can build an electric tractor, which John Deere has just done, and it meets the goal, then that's great, or if I figure out a way to convert the carbon created by a traditional tractor, I'm okay with that too. It's whatever gets us to where we need to get to as a goal. It needs to be goal-oriented and focused in that way, so that we don't....
When we talk about de-risking and the idea of government funding the risk to industry from the adoption of technology, we always need to be cognizant that at the end of the day we fund that de-risking with taxpayers' money. Moral hazard dictates that we need to be cognizant of what we're doing with that money. I think it's important that we do it in a manner that allows the adaptation and development of new technologies across the board, but that we don't do it in such a way that we pit one side of the sector against the other.
In that spirit, I want to ask you, Ms. Bak, how you feel government can play a progressive role in creating the environment that will allow for the adoption of clean technologies, recognizing that we don't live in a static environment. Companies and government have been pushing for the creation and adaptation of cleaner technologies for years. Yes, we're in an accelerated growth state right now, in which there's a higher focus on achieving those goals in a timely manner, but we don't live in a static environment. We need to continue to push in the same manner as we have done , but how can we do a better job of creating broad-based policy that doesn't pit one sector against the other and that creates the type of environment in which you really do have a level playing field?