Ultimately, you have to rely not only on brain power and the innovators but you also have to incent them. You'll see in this budget that there are many policies directed to doing precisely that. We lead on about 30 of the 50 actions of the pan-Canadian framework on clean growth. NRCan is among the lead departments in ensuring that the policies are in place that can maximize our potential.
On the phase-out, over a very long time, I'm sure, of traditional sources of energy, we look at, for example, what the International Energy Agency says. It says that it's not going to happen anytime soon, that growth for oil and gas is increasing in the developing world, that middle classes that are becoming more and more able to consume are looking for sources of energy to satisfy that demand. It makes sense in Canada, as one of the very few nations in the world that is actually an exporter of energy, to look at satisfying this demand and then using the revenue we will achieve from creating more opportunity for our producers and exporters to finance the transition to a lower carbon economy, including renewables, and funding electric vehicle charging stations and many of the elements you'll see in budget 2017. Canada is better positioned than almost any other country in the world, I would say, to satisfy this growing demand more sustainably, moving the product more safely than we have traditionally, while having a clear eye on future opportunities as we incent the private sector to work with us in a renewable resource energy economy.