Again, I'll ask Dr. Hamza to add to what I'm saying.
With regard to carbon capture and storage, one of the things our department is working on is something called a storage atlas, and it's going to point out where in Canada it's possible to store carbon dioxide. The challenge is actually capture. That's the biggest challenge. There are lots of places to store in deep-water aquifers, in old oil wells, in particular in southwestern Alberta. That's an exaggeration, because it goes right up to Edmonton, but the area south and west of Edmonton in Alberta is a particularly good area for that.
What we anticipate is that there will be pipelines from Fort McMurray. The Fort McMurray area is not one of the best areas for it, but just south and west of there it does become good. So there will probably be a pipeline that goes to those areas that would be used and sequestered throughout Alberta and Saskatchewan. Currently, the Weyburn-Midale project in Saskatchewan is one of the biggest in the world, and is looking at monitoring, looking at evaluations, and looking at how this can best be done. We do see it as an opportunity to capture the carbon dioxide and inject it deep into the ground, where it will stay secure for thousands of years.