Thank you, Monsieur Bigras.
I am afraid I am unable to answer you in French. My French is not good enough for that.
First of all, yes, I don't think we can get certainty, and we've changed our vocabulary on that, just to be clear. We need predictability and stability. I don't think there is any certainty that anybody can have for any length of time because the world has to adjust to what's possible, what's happening, new developments on science and everywhere as to what we have to do.
Clearly industry, and CAPP, have been pushing to have policy in place, as I've said, for seven years now, but we don't want just any old policy, obviously. We want certainty of good policy, and it's important to get that as soon as we can. I don't think a delay of a few months at this stage is what's critical; what's critical is to get in place a policy with the right orientation, the right structure, and be in a position to ramp up the price and the demands on industry in line with what our major trading partner and other major economies are doing so that we can move forward with those other countries in our contribution to the global effort.