Thank you.
Thanks to our guests.
Mr. Vaillant, I read Fire Weather, and I must say that I haven't been as frightened in almost my whole life from reading a book. I live in the boreal forest, and I thought I knew fire.
You write about the heroism of the people from the Slave Lake fire, who, at Fort Mac, literally put themselves on the line to get people out and keep them safe. You mentioned the Chisholm fire that had the radiant capacity of a nuclear bomb. It's something I can't even begin to imagine.
I know that Danielle Smith and my Conservative colleagues are always blaming arson. That level of arson would only be possible at a corporate level—would you not agree?
I just want to ask this, because you mentioned the fact that the fossil fuel industry is a fire-creating industry. That's fundamental to its production. You heard Mr. Kruger today. Mr. Kruger seemed really surprised, as a former vice-president of Exxon, that there were thousands of documents that would have been generated on his watch about the arson power of his industry. Could you reflect on what you heard and what you think we as legislators need to do?