A large portion of that discount is due to the bottleneck in—and the name escapes me for the area—the Midwest of the United States. .
My final comment concerns page 10 in the last paragraph. With budget 2016, we brought in an extra estimate of prudence in the $40-billion adjustment. We've seen the transitory factor of the Fort McMurray wildfires come into effect, but also there are a lot of global uncertainties we're still dealing with, and I don't think they're going to subside at all.
I would slightly disagree with the language describing where we forecast nominal GDP to come in these two years. I would still call it prudence in forecasting. You've used other words, but I would still call it prudence. If you'd like to comment on that, it would be great.