I totally agree that we are in a disbalanced situation. We are not fighting equally.
One of the reasons for this situation is that we must return to the ballot every five years, while there is a perennity with the Chinese government. They know that they don't have to change their course of action. The next government will not necessarily have different priorities; they will simply continue.
Their planning, when it comes to strategic planning, as has been said in the past by their own officials, is not planned over years; it's planned on generations. They are planting seeds today that they will be capable of harvesting later on because of this capacity to go on forever.
What can we do in that perspective? Ask for reciprocity. Ask for more balance between what they offer to us and what we offer to them.
I will give you an example. A few years ago we sold the Nexen company to a Chinese government-led company for $15 billion. Try to buy a corner store in China if you can. I challenge you to be capable to even do such a thing. We won't be able to do it.
When you have an energy company led by government officials who are capable of setting foot in a province like Alberta, if they need to call the premier, they will do it directly. I am a Canadian; if I call the premier in Alberta, I'll probably be put on hold forever.
In that perspective, it's that disbalance we are talking about that exists, which we must correct ourselves.