CERI published a report in the springtime as it related to what we call the Pacific access, where we are looking at the Trans Mountain and Northern Gateway pipelines. Within that report we drew out of that the economic spinoff effects of the existing operations, both conventional and oil sands. Then we highlighted the GDP growth, employment, taxation, royalty growth, as a result of each one of the three primary pipelines that are being proposed.
You could take any one of those pipelines and say, those numbers there, if that pipeline doesn't go...then that is lost to the Canadian economy. In its very simplest form, what I can suggest to you is that we are about 40% along the full development curve. That's primarily led by oil sands, but it also includes—this is on the liquid side. That would mean there's 60% of the development that's out there. If the pipelines aren't built, it's not going to get to market.