I think with the oil and gas, the problem is that it's very expensive to extract oil and gas in the north and you don't have a lot of infrastructure. At one point we were looking at building the Mackenzie gas pipeline down the valley to ship the three trillion cubic feet of natural gas we have up in the Mackenzie Delta, but the environmental assessments took so long that the opportunity at the end of the day was missed. There's plenty of oil and gas, but it's just hard to get it out and very expensive. It's a $150 barrel of oil kind of thing, right?
Gold is becoming increasingly an interesting commodity there. There's a lot more interest lately and it's because of the price differential of the dollar. The 30% reduction in the dollar means that, while gold is about $1,100 or $1,200 or $1,300 U.S. an ounce right now, I think, when you add that 30% then it's about $1,600 to $1,700 Canadian an ounce. If you're producing in Canadian dollars.... Agnico Eagle has the Meadowbank mine near Baker Lake, and its production costs are just under $700 an ounce. You can see there's some significant margin in that, and so there's a bunch of ground that's been picked up around Yellowknife by a couple of companies and there's much more interest in gold. Gold projects are the ones that are getting permitted in Nunavut right now, and they will contribute to the economy as we go forward.