You have to remember, Mr. Godfrey, that I am not a trader by background. I am an electrician, so I come from an industry background. This trading thing is relatively new to me. However, this much I know: we trade globally and we don't make everything in Canada. We are better at doing certain things and we sell them, and we're not as good at other things and we buy them. It's a global system. We cannot be part of the global energy system of trading.
By the way, the price of oil is not set between London and Calgary; it's a global price for oil. I'm a little bit puzzled by that interpretation.
In terms of Governor Schwarzenegger and this California-Massachusetts-Ontario-Canada connection, I remember Governor Schwarzenegger, who is very difficult to miss, sitting with Tony Blair and talking about a California-to-U.K. or -EU linking. I remember that the northeast is all part of RGGI. I remember that there are five governors who announced yesterday that they will have a western governors emission trading cap-and-trade system. So I'm a bit puzzled that we would try to use California and the northeast states as an example.
Let me conclude on one thing: we have never said that emissions trading is the only bullet. It's part of a toolbox, and that toolbox will apply to certain sectors of the economy, while other sectors have better tools. I want to make that very clear. We are very responsible and we understand that very well.