Thank you for the question.
Forgive me, once again, Mr. Simard, for my English and my inability to answer you substantially in your language. I'm working on it.
First of all, I will speak briefly about the IEA report, and then I want to dig into your comments about the offshore, which is obviously something that I'm very passionate about. As this committee knows, Newfoundland and Labrador relies more on the royalties from its oil industry than even Alberta, which is obviously substantial.
To speak to the IEA report, it is something that we're looking at very carefully in its implications for this country. We had asked them to commission this report. It's helpful to remember that the IEA was formed by the OECD in 1974, after the price shocks of the 1970s, to make sure that the world had enough oil. For the IEA to come out in 2021 and say that they think the world does have enough oil is seminal; I think it's worth saying that. It's not coincidental that we saw on the 26th the upheaval that we have seen in three major oil companies. The shareholders and investors are reacting. Having said that, it's very sweeping and is not particular, in some cases, to Canada.
I would say this about the offshore. First of all, Newfoundland and Labrador's light sweet crude has some of the lowest-intensity emissions per barrel in the world. Even the IEA acknowledges that oil and gas will be in the mix for quite some time, up to and including 2050. We are laser-focused on lowering emissions. If you can begin with a product that inherently has lower emissions, that is a good thing, but we are also looking at working with the industry to lower emissions in the extraction and operation—