Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I'm looking through the communications that came out around the time the bank approved in principle its participation in this project. I'm not finding any mention of importing power from the United States.
We have a quote from Mr. Corriveau who is with the bank. He said that the “expectation” is that “energy will flow from Ontario to PJM over the long term given that Ontario has a much higher share of the lower marginal cost sources of supply—which is typically non-emitting—compared to PJM.”
Again, this is directly contrary to what we heard from Professor Winfield.
In the press release that the CIB put out, there's a quote from you, Mr. Cory:
This project will allow Ontario to export its clean, non-emitting power to one of the largest power markets in the world and, as a result, benefit Canadians economically while also significantly contributing to greenhouse gas emissions reductions in the PJM market.
Let's go down and hear from the then minister, Catherine McKenna. This is what she had to say:
With the U.S. pledging to achieve a carbon-free electrical grid by 2035, Canada has an opportunity to export clean power, helping to reduce emissions, maximizing clean power use and making electricity more affordable for Canadians
It seems like an incredible sales job when the actual rationale that you've explained to us today was that in mid-term you're going to be a net importer of American power and in the long term probably also a net importer of American power, whether clean or otherwise.
Why didn't the bank come clean at the beginning and articulate that this was largely going to be a project that imported American power to Ontario?