I cannot provide you that answer—I wish I could—because I don't have the data or the information based on how the standards would be changed.
I can tell you that the industry and the sector in Canada will comply with whatever changes are brought by the government. The fact that the government bases its regulations on science that is accepted worldwide I think is the right approach. The sector will continue to provide that. It's essential to ensure that Canadians do have access to that service. Everywhere I go in Canada, people ask us for more. Nobody asks us for less.
When we look at what's happening in Canada, Canadians are more connected than almost anyone around the world. We spend more time online than anyone in the world. We're among the heaviest users of mobile technology. What we expect—if we want to use numbers to scare people—is that in the next five years data consumption in Canada will grow by 700%.
What's happening is a rollout of more networks and more devices throughout our communities to enable that growth, which is supporting jobs, businesses, health care, education, community safety, everywhere in our communities. That's the part of the story that has to be told as well. This can be done, and it is done respecting the standards that are set based on science. I'm sure the folks from Health Canada have indicated to you that they apply the precautionary principle. It is included in the standards in Canada. I've asked those questions and they've told us that it is, and we respect that.