In 2009 it certainly was global. The recession was the big impact. Actually, what we are seeing in terms of the cut in well numbers is the fact that we spend a lot more time on each well now. That's due to the long reach—the horizontals and the directional drilling we do.
In 2006, with all of the strong natural gas prices, natural gas was very available at very shallow depths. It was quite easy to go drill a well. Some of our rigs could move quickly, and do two wells a day. It was just a function of what was in demand at the time, as natural gas was the in-demand product. Now, with the weaker prices, oil is in demand.
In Canada, we've retrieved all of the so-called easy resources. We still have a great abundance of resources, but they require more work--things like these long-reach wells, the fracked wells, and that sort of thing. It just takes more time. We'll never see 23,000 wells again. Honestly, we have the equipment to do it, but we definitely don't have the people, the skilled labour to do it. At the moment, we are struggling to make sure we have appropriate skilled labour on the rigs this winter, so that we can fulfill our commitments.