You can make a long list of things, I think, depending on the sector. This, I think, starts with understanding where you are. You know what they say; if you know where you are, you're never lost. We need to know where we are vis-à-vis everybody else out there in the world that we're competing with, and that should influence how the regulation gets its framework or what those inputs are.
In the province of New Brunswick, we have natural gas, but we're going to bring our natural gas down from Alberta. We're sitting on lots of natural gas here in this province, but no, we're not going to frack it, and we'll live on the transfer payments from Ottawa that he referred to.
If we have the right price of natural gas, we need to understand what that does for our energy costs in manufacturing. If we have the permits for....
We're in the offshore oil and gas business, for example, with ships off Newfoundland. We deal with Exxon. Exxon moves all around the world. They're going to spend $50 million to $100 million to drill exploration wells. It's a 60-day job in the Gulf of Mexico. To get a permit, it's 100 days approximately. If you go to Newfoundland, it's 500 days and counting.
What does it take to be competitive, and why? If we have unique circumstances because of some local conditions, that's fine, but if it's just bureaucracy or lack of knowledge or disjointed organizations having their own competing agendas, that just creates a lot of anxiety.
We have to deal with the aboriginal question in this country. We have to look after the indigenous community. We have to be supportive of them. We also can't stop things from moving ahead. We just can't let that happen.