Of course we always want to be consulted--and we have been. The minister and the bureaucrats talk to us; you talk to us. Our views are far from secret. We put them out in the newspapers. We've been on television. We've submitted them to Environment Canada. Our views are pretty clear: we want to see a climate regime in Canada that puts us ahead of the curve, is sufficiently aggressive that we won't be subject to border measures in the U.S., prevents leakage that results in production and jobs going elsewhere while the climate is not being protected, and recognizes cogeneration and our early action. We haven't been shy about any of those things.
At the same time, we understand that the government doesn't do policy entirely in consultation, because there are huge trade-offs. Let's be very honest with ourselves here. The entire global economy right now is dependent upon greenhouse gas emissions. What we're talking about is retooling the whole economy. We're an exporting nation. It isn't a simple task to reduce dependence on greenhouse gases when you're in a trading relationship.