I think I will make my comments in a non-partisan way.
We need regulation. That's the first thing. Alcan's call is, give us a regulatory framework. It doesn't have to be the most intrusive, but it has to be a path on the road to an outcome. It took us 10 years to learn how to do this, so whether it's a government here or a government in Europe, we're all learning. What we want basically is to put in place something that provides some consistency. We have to invest over $10 billion to renew the capital stock. We have to build a $550 million plant in Joncquière; we're building a $150 million plant for spent potlining treatment in Quebec; we have to modernize Kitimat, so there's $2 billion. I could go on and on. Those investments aren't going to be made if our government, any government, says we don't know what we want to do in terms of regulation.
Regulation for us—and you may not have heard this from many people in business—is absolutely fundamentally critical to how we're going to make our investment decisions. The sooner we have it, the sooner we know how you as politicians are going to enable that investment climate and that environmental target setting, the faster we can move.