I think it's fair if I answer that question.
Those investments were made in the late 1990s and up to the end of 2002. They were made based on certain kinds of access to raw materials that no longer exists. We're now moving that product south. We're pipelining bitumen south. So there's a different circumstance. If we want to win back those investments, if we want to win the next round of investments, it will take the value of the accelerated capital cost allowance.
This isn't something that's going to cost. This is only deferring the tax collected. The same taxes will be collected over the life of the asset, and because you've already had the accelerated capital cost allowance in place for a few years, the investments that happened three years ago or two years ago or last year will start paying more tax now. It comes back to the government. It's just deferred taxes.