You touched on a point that I made, which is the polarization around the energy discussion in this country.
I'm not trying to point fingers at any one side. Just to be clear in what I'm saying, I think it's polarized on both sides. On one side, we have those who think we can make a very rapid transition to an all-renewables system, which unfortunately is not technically feasible today. I think we can get more and more renewables and increase penetration over time, certainly, but to get to an all-renewables system today is unrealistic.
You then have those on the other side who say renewables are unreliable and expensive, and there are all sorts of false narratives there.
The truth is in the middle. What we really need to be doing is working beyond these polarizing sorts of narratives and working on the solutions that we need to get us to where we need to go.
As far as the industrial carbon tax goes, the industrial carbon regime that exists in Alberta specifically has been very effective in terms of incentivizing the right sorts of developments in infrastructure in Alberta around renewables. The retail carbon tax, though, has not had a direct impact on the work that we are doing.