I agree. I think the refining business has been terrible for the last 25 years, except for the last three or four years. You had excess capacity, and the problem in the refining business is that once you build it, it's there forever. It doesn't waste...as you do for the upstream. So oil companies have little interest in the downstream, with tight margins. However, in certain regions you have positions of monopoly and certain companies do benefit much more than others, depending on their regional implementation and how much competition exists. So you have big regional price differences. It depends a lot on concentration and the distribution networks.
I don't know the situation in Chicoutimi, but in the U.S. you can see that different markets have different fundamentals, with different prices. In California, we pay a dollar more than does the rest of the country. In the midwest, some regions are difficult to access by pipeline, so some of the local refiners make a lot more money.
We need to make sure--and that's the role of the regulators--that we have a level of competition, that we have access to the logistics and are able to monitor prices to compare them to the main prices, or the exchange prices, to see if there are big differentials and whether or not certain companies are really pushing the envelope a little bit.