Maybe I'll start off. Certainly if you look across Europe, you will see that there are obviously other motivators happening there. But if you look at a number of different jurisdictions in Europe—the United Kingdom, Germany, Austria, the Netherlands—you will see that there are lots of things being done in those jurisdictions to better capture the value of waste. They've actually put together strategies around increasing the amount of materials that are diverted. They are using different tools, like many of the things we have talked about today—disposal bans, disposal levies, extended producer responsibility programs—in order to capture more of the resources within the waste.
There are lots of different jurisdictions but again they are very, very different. This is always the thing. We can take lots of advice from those jurisdictions, but we have a bit of a different situation. Primarily for waste, our biggest issue, at least from an Ontario context, is that we've got a large open border with the U.S. and the materials that can flow easily to the U.S. are really what dictate what happens in Ontario.