That's a very good question as well. The answer to that is no, we haven't really examined that directly. As you suggest, and as you point out, it is a question of the transmission. It is a fair distance. We haven't looked at it, as I said, directly. I think that is an area that perhaps the fisheries department might have been looking at, or perhaps even the province. I'm not sure. We can check that for you.
I just wanted to respond, if I could, to the nuclear question. We have just completed the first phase of a study with Petroleum Technology Alliance Canada, taking a look at various nuclear technologies that are available within Canada and other jurisdictions that might have the potential to be used in the oil sands area. The results of the study to date indicate that, as Mr. Stringer has pointed out, it's really becoming an issue of size, proximity of the nuclear facility to the actual load--the oil sands operation--and the amount of compression that is required in order to maintain the steam pressure and steam temperature to transport the steam produced at the nuclear facility to the actual site.
Petroleum Technology Alliance Canada, along with industry, is engaging in the second phase of this study right now, which will take a look at some of the technologies that could be applied and the economics of their application.