Yes, that's an important lesson in our report: The need to continue the job of increasing public awareness of the issue. Certainly, it is much improved from what it was when I first became exposed to this issue in the early 1990s and when I attended the Rio convention in 1992, at which the UNFCCC was signed. The average Canadian now understands the problems with climate change. Unfortunately, it's taken years of inaction at the Canadian and global levels to reach the point where we're seeing the tangible effects in terms of extreme weather and more frequent extreme weather. I think the public awareness is getting there, though there's more work to be done.
In terms of accountability and transparency, which was part of your question, Canada needs to do a better job in not only coming up with plans but also disclosing the basis, assumptions and modelling for them, which is something on which Canada lags behind other countries like the U.K. in terms of transparency in the modelling. We've had plans over the years that, on paper, have appeared to add up but that, in practice, haven't even come close to adding up in terms of the reduction, so I think we have to be more transparent about the assumptions and also factor in when we go off script and put in programs that undermine our climate change efforts, which has happened as well.