Senator BIRMINGHAM (South Australia—Minister for Finance, Minister for Trade, Tourism and Investment, Vice-President of the Executive Council and Leader of the Government in the Senate) (14:21): President-elect Biden has made certain policy commitments, and we welcome the fact that President-elect Biden has committed to invest heavily in technology. It's very consistent with the technology road map that our government has outlined in terms of meeting our emissions reductions. The United States is Australia's No. 1 investment partner, so the complementarity that comes with them having technological ambitions alongside our technology ambitions absolutely sit well together. In terms of energy generation, which Senator Waters asked about, let me again look at the share of solar and wind as part of electricity generation. In Australia, solar and wind now stands at 18 per cent of electricity generation compared to the OECD average of 11 per cent. In the US it's nine per cent. In Canada it's six per cent. In New Zealand it's five per cent, and in Japan it's eight per cent. So, again, Australia leads in terms of renewables, solar and wind— The PRESIDENT: A point of order, Senator Waters? Time for the answer has expired. Senator Waters: I think there were still three seconds on the clock, which is why I stood up, but I'm sorry if I got that wrong. It was a point of order on relevance. My question went to 100 per cent clean electricity by 2035. The minister's given a nice little lecture, but I'm interested in an actual answer. The PRESIDENT: Senator Waters, I think you did stand when there were two seconds left, but, with respect, there's no opportunity for me to provide advice to the minister. I will say, however, that I believe he was being directly relevant because the question referenced renewable energy and he was directly talking about that topic, even if not in the terms you wished. I can't instruct him on how to answer a question. A final supplementary.