Yes, thank you for the question.
I think it's hard to predict exactly what the impacts will be. Clearly, commodity prices have an impact. However, I think we are finding that Canada is overall less competitive these days. We have such a number of policies that are impacting our competitiveness and it's not anything taken singularly, but it's the cumulative effect of all of these things. When investors decide where to invest their capital, they do look at all of the aspects, whether it's carbon levies, methane emissions reductions, and now if they are looking at the Canadian exploration expense, it's just one more option that's off the table for them when they're looking where to invest their money.
I think it speaks to Canada not being as open to this industry as other countries are. Certainly as we look to the administration south of the border, they are doing everything they can to welcome and encourage activity down there.
As you have mentioned, the industry has been through devastating times. Tens of thousands of people have lost their jobs, and yes, in Alberta alone in 2014, we had over 100,000 non-resident workers. They have all gone back to their home provinces.
We need to build that investment climate back up again and continue to have a competitive environment to attract that capital, and it's proving difficult.
There is risk involved in exploration, and taking away this incentive that will help them decide to invest that capital is an important aspect of what we can do. As I said, I don't believe it's a subsidy in the normal sense. This isn't affecting the prices that they achieve for their products. It speaks to the risk, and they go on. This will mostly affect the small explorers and producers that these days often are the ones that go out and do exploratory wells which then pass those fields on to larger producers and encourage more development drilling.