It is, without a doubt.
If you took a look at the fossil fuel industry in Alberta as a whole, you'd see that we've already seen the phase-out of coal-fired power, which is something I was intimately involved in as president of the Alberta Federation of Labour. I was also co-chair of something called the Coal Transition Coalition, which was a coalition of unions representing people who worked in the coal-fired power sector, both the plants and the coal mines. Together, we negotiated the first sector-wide just transition package for workers who lost their jobs as a result of that change. That was thousands of jobs already lost.
As I mentioned in my opening remarks, the number of people working in Alberta's oil and gas sector has already dropped from a peak of about 182,000 directly employed in 2013, and we've lost about 42,000 since then, so it's happening already as a result of the move away from fossil fuels. There's a reluctance of big investors to put money into it, and then there's also the question of automation.