I'm going to blast through this and then I'm going to open it up for discussion.
We have to ensure that any incentives for substitute goods, like low-carbon substitute goods—Ms. Hastings talked about electric vehicles—don't cause inadvertent carbon leakage. For example, if we're going to incentivize the use of electric vehicles and we haven't accounted for carbon leakage in the oil and gas sector or coal fire production, that we're not actually increasing demand, because we've created a substitute good, or demand for a substitute good, without taking care of that.
I'm sorry—I'm kind of off my game today, but you get what I'm saying, right? If we're going to incentivize electric vehicles, then we have to ensure that our electricity production is less reliant on carbon-emitting sources than it is right now in Canada. Would that be correct?