If I can speak very briefly on natural gas, I have two responses to that. Yes, in a lot of developing countries they do control energy prices in ways that keep them artificially low. That's pressure they'll eventually have to pay the piper for, but for the moment, indeed, they give some of their industries a competitive advantage. If you look at natural gas in particular, on slide 13 you can see the way European, Japanese, and North American markets work together. They aren't much different. By comparison--and I think our manufacturing colleagues would have shown you this--for the people who use natural gas as a feedstock, in particular, there's a big difference. In places with what's called stranded natural gas--gas that will eventually become part of the LNG market but right now is stranded--the natural gas costs may be 50 cents per thousand cubic feet, as compared to what we pay in Canada, and that's just because of the circumstances of those particular countries.
On October 3rd, 2006. See this statement in context.