Sure. Maybe I'll start by quickly.... The capital cost treatment, or the depreciation schedule, is a means for an operator or business to manage risk in a project. They're more prepared to take a riskier project if they can write off that risk sooner so that they gain more confidence in a shorter time window. Large, significant capital projects, given the time that's required to actually deploy them and see some kind of return, inherently have a lot of risk through construction and the upcycle of getting started. It's not a loss on government revenue; it's a timing process for government revenue through the depreciation schedule that you would front-end load. But it's more an opportunity for those riskier projects that we think are important for Canada and for the economy, and moving our product, whether it's an LNG plant, or whether it's a refinery, an upgrader, or any significant resource development. Having the ability to write off those riskier projects sooner is a way of freeing up capital that can be deployed elsewhere.
On February 17th, 2016. See this statement in context.