I know a lot of fertilizer plants get accused of...from the cooling towers. As we were talking about, there are millions of gallons a day, basically, that are just evaporating. You need water to cool things off. That was always quite astounding. Never mind the water you need for the boilers in the processes and all those kinds of things people don't consider, just to make a ton of fertilizer and to feed over 50% of the world.
You touched earlier on the regulatory environment. I'm kind of curious. Between Canada and the U.S., both countries work a lot with each other when it comes to fertilizer production and even supply chains. Back in Brandon, we're always shipping down to North Dakota, so the supply is there.
In dealing with the two different countries and the regulatory burden, are you seeing a certain pattern here in Canada that we can correct versus the U.S. so that we can be more competitive, build more fertilizer plants and be more self-reliant?