Thank you for the question.
I will answer you in English, because it will be more efficient.
Right now in Canada we are at a crossroads. We have collectively subsidized the pipeline you mentioned and have also collectively subsidized an increase in plastic production, notably at the Inter Pipeline plant in Alberta, at the Dow Chemical plant in Alberta and at the Nova Chemicals plant in Ontario.
In our view, if we're going to get to zero plastic waste, we have to stop subsidizing pipelines and plastic production. What I believe will happen with the new pipeline is that some of the heavy oil from Alberta will be shipped overseas. It will likely be shipped to China for the production of plastics there, which will be sent back on container ships for products that will end up back in Canada.
We really need to look at what we call the upstream problem of plastic, which is how it is made, how much of it is made and what we use it for. Obviously, subsidizing the oil and gas industry and the pipeline industry is not going to get us in the right direction of eliminating this pollution, whether we're talking about greenhouse gas emissions or plastic pollution.