It's so important to bring the entire community in, because you need to have everybody's voices. It's not going to be a singular person who is transitioning. This energy transition is going to bring everybody along, and it is going to happen.
If I can make one point, in my organization, we work with a lot of remote and indigenous communities, and I've heard some people say today that Canada has had cheap, affordable energy. Perhaps it has, if you've been living in metropolitan areas, but I speak with people who live on reserves and they pay $500 to $700 a month for electricity. It's mad how much they pay. Energy cannot be considered cheap and affordable when a quarter of your pay is going toward electricity.
Things like this are why it's necessary to bring the entire community along, because it affects everybody. If you're putting up a solar farm or wind turbines, you're having a geothermal plant or you're doing heat pumps or retrofits.... Retrofits are so important, especially on remote communities, because they live in insufficient housing. These houses already need more energy to heat up, cool down and just to run.
It is a community problem. Perhaps we don't see that because we don't live in these kinds of communities, but it is a community problem.