Yes. I would make a couple of comments in response to that question.
The first is that over the longer term, investment in these LNG facilities will deliver significant economic benefit. We have included in our submission, based on 5 bcf per day—which is a reasonable estimate, I think, of what might come forward in B.C.—$500 billion in GDP, three million person years of employment, and $150 billion in taxes and royalties if we look back upstream as well, so there are some very significant economic impacts.
There is no question that there is a competitiveness dimension of this. I mentioned how the tax treatment in Canada differs from that in the countries with which we're competing, Australia in particular. On any particular project, there would definitely be an accelerated near-term tax writeoff. If you compare the 30% to the 8% declining balance, I think in the fullness of time, that's de minimis. That's relative to the relative economic benefit that would come forward.