I will answer in English.
This is at the heart of the real problem we have here. Large capital investments take at least five years to go from planning to implementation. So even with the accelerated capital cost allowance, with an extension of two years, some of these investments may occur and not be able to take advantage of the capital cost allowance. We've always argued to make it the length of time that a normal major business investment would occur, from the planning stage to the actual implementation stage.
We're sitting here in the North American environment. Our sister association in the U.S. is now projecting $72 billion of investment in the United States' chemical industry, due to shale gas largely, and about $50 billion in seven other manufacturing sectors that are highly energy dependent.
With that 60% double declining balance forever—it's not for two years, it's not a little extension, but it's there in the tax code.... We know what happens when something is in a tax code. It's pretty permanent—unless it's a co-op.