As I mentioned in my testimony, there are global forces at work that are beyond what is happening in Canada. Obviously, climate policy is happening in other countries, and we are seeing that and we will see the effects. We are seeing electric vehicles. The rates of purchase of electric vehicles are going up globally, and that will have its own effects.
In Canada, we basically have climate policy that will seek to reduce domestic demand for oil and gas. That policy is largely in place, so we have ZEV mandates and we have a commitment to clean electricity by 2035. We have a number of policies that are working on the demand side in Canada.
The question that we're here to discuss today is the result of what those policies will be on workers and how we can make sure that workers don't get left behind and communities don't get left behind.
The point I would really like to make is that we need to proactively plan for that future. We need to think about that future. We need to understand what the end goal is and come to some shared understanding of what that end goal is in order to make sure that we have the supports in place and that both workers and communities are supported.