The scenario in the fertilizer sector, as we described, is that we are competing against a lot of other jurisdictions that don't have a comparable carbon pricing system in place. Our main competitors, when we're looking at the production of potash fertilizers, are Russia, Belarus and China. When we're looking at nitrogen fertilizers, it's a lot more diverse, but, again, Russia, the U.S. and China are big players.
Part of the analysis we did last year with PwC was to look at those jurisdictional competitiveness risks. In the case in which we have a rising price on carbon and a rising cost of production here in Canada, other jurisdictions that don't have those added costs but have comparable incentives to bring fertilizer production in or to decarbonize existing production are where we're really seeing a lot of those investments fall. It's a real risk and it's a slow risk. It's a lagging indicator of a lot of these policies, but it's something we're certainly keeping close tabs on.
