That's a great question.
I think it's moving forward with all aspects of the different climate policies, whether it's zero-emission vehicle mandates for electric vehicles, which is going to drive people towards electric vehicles and help support electric vehicle production in Canada, or whether it's building standards and codes, which is going to drive people to retrofit their homes and create more jobs for insulators, electricians and others.
The clean electricity standard that the government is committed to is going to help build out our clean electricity system across the country and create jobs there, whether it's in solar or wind or other renewable electricity production, but also in transmission lines and other aspects of that.
Moving forward on buildings, on transportation, on electricity and energy, on every aspect is what's needed to develop those jobs. There's no one silver bullet. There's no one policy that's really going to drive this change and drive the job growth. It needs all of them.
The price on carbon has been extremely successful in sending that signal. That does help create the innovations you were talking about and the technology, which also helps create jobs.
Just so you know, Canada does punch way above its weight on technological innovations for the size of our population. British Columbia, where I live, actually punches way above its weight as a province. Often about half of the Global Cleantech awards out of San Francisco every year are from British Columbia, and it's said that's directly attributed to the carbon price here and has driven innovation.