I can quickly walk you through the recommendations. There are five.
First, the just transition legislation should reference key international terms and commitments. It should directly reference a transition away from fossil fuels so that we know where we're going, we know the principles we're using to get there, and we're referencing key legislation already in place, such as the Net-Zero Emissions Accountability Act.
It should articulate the tripartite-plus process. It should name the partners who are involved in those and name other stakeholders who will be engaged in the process. It should make commitments to indigenous rights, be clear about indigenous rights and specifically commit to leave no one behind.
The act should also establish an advisory body with a clearly defined role, and have a mandate and a membership for that body. That should be set out in the act so that it is very clear to all. That advisory body needs to be well resourced in order to do its work.
As I mentioned in reference to the commissioner of the environment and sustainable development's report on the just transition, the act needs to lay out a plan for implementation and accountability. It should set out governance structures and give the framework for who is responsible for what. It should also ensure that there are methods for evaluation to make sure that the programs and the policies are put in place and that the funding that is put in place is going to the right people and doing the work it is intended to do.
Finally, the act needs to refer to a larger just transition strategy. It needs to think about the larger complementary measures, not just the legislation itself. As my fellow panellist was saying, that's not necessarily enough. We need to think about this more comprehensively. We need to think about funding mechanisms and economic diversification strategies. We need to make sure there's appropriate training and retraining and reskilling, and then include monitoring and evaluation as well.