I can't give you a whole lot of insight into what's happened in these countries. From some of the reading I've done and from looking at some of the numbers, though, my sense is that they are having many of the same challenges we have in the areas of consumer use of energy and in transportation. In many European countries now, those are the largest growth areas. In other cases, some of those countries made commitments to reduce or phase out the use of coal-fired electricity. They haven't been able to do so quite as quickly as they had planned—what's happened in Ontario is the same thing—because it imposes real costs on consumers and on governments when it comes to phasing out existing plants that have been operating for thirty or forty years.
As I said, I think one of the challenges has been that too much of the focus has been on ambitious-sounding targets and not enough has been on what this really means in terms of how we're going to change our use of energy on a day-to-day basis.