Thank you, Mr. Sorbara.
Mr. Hannaford, I was in front of a group of young people today talking civics. It was a civics class. I said to them that the most important question in the country right now is how we double our electricity in the next generation in the next 15 to 20 years. Some other folks may disagree with that assertion. There are always a bunch of priorities.
As it relates to our economic competitiveness, we look at Volkswagen and at different groups that are coming, and we talk about that transition to a low-carbon economy. It's all premised on electricity. I've recently seen Premier Legault going to St. John's. We see some of the analytics from different provinces getting to the upper echelon of their electricity capacity. That's traditionally been the domain of the provinces. That's historically how that has come.
Can you speak to this committee about Natural Resources Canada's approach—and whether or not that might be changing—of trying to work collaboratively with the provinces to make sure, on the national front, that we're going to have the electricity needed to drive that transition to a low-carbon economy?