Mr. Chair, carbon capture and storage technology has been evolving over a number of years. It is not new, and we have applications of the technology that are functioning. In Alberta, the Quest project is an example. There are a couple of references there. There's the storage of the carbon, and there's also the means by which it's captured. Those are a couple of different issues, in a sense.
I believe what you're referring to is direct air capture, which is the drawing out of hydrogen from the atmosphere. It is a technology that's evolving, where Canada is seeing some innovators who are making substantial contributions to the evolution of that technology.
We also, though, have people who are investing in and are real experts with respect to capture through industrial applications, through a variety of other applications of carbon that's generated. Storage of that carbon depends a bit on geologic formations. Canada has real advantages with respect to that as well. In Alberta, there are very substantial geologic formations that can form a real opportunity to store substantial amounts of carbon, and those are subject then to monitoring and to a series of other means by which the carbon is captured effectively for an indefinite period of time.