Yes. You raised the question about the relationship ultimately between the federal government and the provinces. Of course, Canada has a complicated political system with jurisdictional divisions and elections from time to time that will turn over governments in a province or federally or things like that.
From the point of view of the energy transition, some sort of policy stability is really very desirable. Maybe it's not the details of this policy and that policy, but at the least they should tend in the same direction, with the same directionality of policy.
I want to say one thing: There's no way that the federal government can decarbonize Canada on its own. It depends on co-operation with the provinces. The political economies of energy are different from one side of the country to the other. Where people get their energy and how the economy has been built are different in Quebec from what they are in Alberta, yet over the long term we want each to develop their own pathways towards a net-zero world.
One of the things my organization does is that we really believe in sectoral and regional pathways because of the nature of Canada and the nature of the problem. Every sector won't decarbonize at the same rate. Light-duty vehicles are happening rapidly now. Heavy trucks are a big problem. We'll have to wait for a decade or whatever.
It's the same provincially. What will happen in B.C. is going to be different from what will happen in Ontario. It's important that we do this in a way that's flexible and has federal leadership but also provides substantial autonomy for the provinces to make their own way.