Certainly for those pursuing major projects in Canada, in Alberta, and in other provinces, yes, these are processes that take years and years and years. They're looked at very seriously by a wide range of provincial regulators and bodies, sometimes a wide range of federal regulators and administrative bodies.
This is sort of what we get at when we say we have excellent environmental laws and Canadians have access, when they are directly impacted, to intervene in those processes. I don't know that we have thought through what it could mean for projects already permitted because we've worried so much about what it could mean for the future and what damage it would do to the balance we've tried to take to these projects, and what damage it would do to the investment climate and certainty for operators.
You may well be right that it even could have an impact looking back on projects that already have years and years invested in working through regulatory processes and the law and complying with those requirements, and of course in some cases staking billions of dollars reliant upon that compliance and that legal status in projects that in some cases also created thousands and thousands of jobs and billions of dollars in economic benefit.