“Significant” means it's meaningful, but not huge. We have plus and minus columns for investing in Canada versus other jurisdictions and we have regulatory certainty. Sometimes it takes a while, but it's certainly clear. In Alberta in particular, we have incredible long-term feedstocks, lots of natural resources. We have favourable corporate tax rates. No one argues about that in our company. The biggest barrier right now is capital expenditures, the capital cost of building the project. We've done some work on that, and indeed had to because our company had these choices of locating on the Gulf Coast or Alberta, especially in this particular instance. We've done a lot of examination on the difference in capital expenditures, and we're finding a 20% to 40% factor difference to build in Alberta or to build on the Gulf Coast. That's largely labour, and when I say that it's also because you can't bring in a large module on the water and put it on the coast, but have to build it in Alberta. There are winterization issues. There are other sorts of things like that. Because of that high capital expenditure or cost, that's why the capital cost allowance or depreciation rate matters.
On October 7th, 2014. See this statement in context.