We have to look at cost of living from both sides. We also have the cost of living with a hotter planet. You've seen the flooding, the heatwaves and the wildfires that also cost Canadians in terms of their pocketbooks, and for some people, their lives. We have to look at both sides of that equation in terms of the cost of climate change.
We have to adapt to not only climate change—because we didn't act soon enough—but we also to the measures we're putting in place to address it, such as carbon pricing, while not leaving behind the people you mentioned, such as people in rural areas or indigenous communities and so on, who might be disproportionately affected by high heating costs or something like that.
The federal government needs to look at a way to move that transition forward without leaving people behind and causing them to disproportionately pay for the common good of addressing the climate crisis.