Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
We're certainly hearing some interesting commentary.
The last witness spoke of exports of fossil fuels. They are going to be burned, but we'll have some other country do it rather than Canada, where Canada has probably the greatest ability to capture greenhouse gases and certainly cares about doing that. Just pushing the production to some other country doesn't make a lot of sense to me.
There was also a comment earlier about pushing away industry in Canada. It's not solely based on energy costs. It has a lot to do with productivity, resource development, consistency and so on. There are a lot of different factors, so I don't think that we should look at that.
The other thing that was mentioned was wind and solar and the moratorium that had taken place in Alberta. The point there was to look at land use and the management of it. For someone who sees the solar panels and sees the windmills.... I can look at an oil and gas site, and it would fit in this little circle that we have here. We're trying to make a comparison of the actual impacts that we have.
I'll get to a question in a moment.
One thing we never seem to talk about is measuring the energy requirements that are there from the first shovel you use to dig up a project when you're going to start building it, all the way through until the very end when you have to decommission it and send the product you have...and put it away. We all seem to say that this is how much energy we're going to get from this while it's working. No one ever seems to come up with the other side of it to make the measurement accurate. That's a major concern I have.
It's great that we talk about the fact that Canada has all of these fantastic mineral deposits and so on, but the other part is that it takes us so long to get anything done. I don't know how we think that all of a sudden environmental groups are just going to sit back and say, “You go for it because we need to have this”.
Dr. Exner-Pirot, could you speak a bit about the risk we have as we depend on Chinese supply chains? Is there a way our governments and utilities can prioritize those things we do have?
That's the concern I have. We're saying we would sooner get it someplace else and that, if there are going to be problems with Chinese production and bringing that in, we'll come up with a different plan. I'd like to know where that plan is going to come from.
I'll turn to Dr. Exner-Pirot, first of all, please.