Quickly, I want to answer Mr. Sprott on this notion that there is a physical price and a paper price. No, there is only one price; there is a paper price. The physical price is basically a derivative of the paper price. The price discovery mechanism is on the exchanges; it is not any more into the physical market. The physical players only take the indication from the paper market and apply a price differential if the quality or the location is different.
So we don't have these two markets and one is good and one is bad. There is one market. They are all together. The problem is that traditionally the physical players were a large player in the market but now they are a very small player. They represent probably less than 5% or 10% of the overall market. So in a way, that horse left the barn a long time ago, and the question of how you bring it back is very complicated.
The question of how you influence Washington is very simple. I live in Washington. You hire a lobbyist. That's the only way for Canadians if you want to have an impact on this regulation—you do as everybody else does.