Thank you, Mr. Chair. I just want to pursue this a little bit further. I appreciate the good information here. That was useful.
I guess I’m also looking at it for rate. For example, new litres of fossil fuel saved and the new greenhouse gas reductions by year for the past five years, so that I can see how much of the low-hanging fruit or whatever it is. Ultimately, the cost-benefit return probably starts to shrink a little bit. I would appreciate that to help me assess that, which brings me to the question.
What do we see as our biggest remaining opportunities? I’d say we are close to achieving, soon, 30 percent in our total heat load. That’s pretty good. Hopefully we can go more. What are our next big opportunities?
Another aspect of it is, we really need to reduce our fossil fuel consumption, i.e., greenhouse gas emissions, to some degree, regardless of savings. But we have to be able to afford to do it. That is still a practical indication.
What is the guideline for the department? Are we still stuck in the, maybe not stuck, but I assume we have lots of opportunity yet that would be economic as well as lead to these savings and reductions? Does our guideline allow us to reduce fossil fuel consumption and greenhouse gas emissions regardless of cost, or maybe not regardless but without a big cost gain? Thank you.