I have some experience in the residential industry. Whenever our independent studies were done, Canada always came up as providing the best quality in housing compared to any other jurisdiction in the world. We build better housing in many ways. With the building codes the way they are today, energy efficiency is a very high priority in most areas. I was involved in the residential industry, so it's interesting to hear you say that.
I need to move on because of time. I'd like to ask Annie a fairly practical question.
There's a company in my jurisdiction that consumes about $10,000 a month in electricity costs right now. They did an analysis a few years ago about what a carbon tax would mean to them. This is a company that employs about 600 people, a fairly large-scale manufacturer in the forging industry. At the time of the 2011 election, they figured it would cost $9,000 per employee for the carbon tax that was being proposed during that election. This meant that they had a critical decision to make, which was either to expand in Canada or to move to Michigan, and there were two other locations they could move to.
I look at the aggressive pricing you've put on carbon here, and the other things. Have you looked at the impact on companies and communities like mine that would lose 650 jobs overnight if that happened?