Thank you, and thank you, Mr. Adler.
There are a couple of minutes left. I have a number of questions, but I don't have time for all of them. I'll try to get one on the table.
I do agree that we should not overact both at the federal and provincial levels.
Mr. Reynish, you said Suncor was scheduled to pay $2.7 billion in taxes to the Canadian government and now it's done to $800 million. That is a sizeable impact. Another concern...Mr. Dunn, you raised the new normal. You've certainly faced a new normal in terms of natural gas prices. People talk about markets going up and down, but the concern here is that we have a fundamentally changed geopolitical situation, and a fundamentally changed crude production market, with the U.S. coming on in such a large way as being one of the top three crude oil producers in the world. You have the reaction by OPEC and by Saudi Arabia, presumably to distort the market and drive the price down, to preserve or increase their market share. That seems to me to be the big elephant in the room that we haven't yet addressed today, and I'm doing it with two minutes left in the panel. Is there someone who wants to take that on?
Canada is a price-taker in this whole thing. The concern is that if OPEC or Saudi Arabia keeps that up as a market strategy, how long can we in this country sustain that?
I'll look to Mr. Reynish. I probably only have time for one or two of you to comment on that.