Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I have a question for you, Mr. McKenzie, now that the interpretation is working.
I know you're with the Pathways Alliance. One of your colleagues, Derek Evans, recently gave advice to Mr. Poilievre, the leader of the Conservative Party, saying that, all in all, carbon pricing would be essential, in his opinion. I find that interesting. I think we do need to put a price on carbon. For the fun of it and without being petty, we asked Mr. Poilievre in the House if he agreed with Mr. Evans. I can read it verbatim:
Mr. Speaker, he sounds like another useless lobbyist saying stupid things.
I'm not the one saying this; it's Mr. Poilievre.
I do not listen to big corporate lobbyists like him. … I know that big corporations and sometimes even very big corporations have no problem forcing workers to pay more tax on their gas but, personally, I cannot do that. I work for workers and consumers. That is why we are going to axe the tax.
He was talking, of course, about the carbon tax.
So I have to ask you this. You're a big oil company, and you want to reduce your carbon emissions. Do you agree with carbon pricing? If so, do you consider yourself a useless lobbyist?