Our chairman, Larry MacDonald, from NOVA, has a phrase that he likes to use, and that is that Canada should aim to be the best resource upgraders in the world, environmentally and economically. If we are the best and you're going to set regulatory frameworks, I think you have to do it within that kind of context. You can't expect a company to be better than it's possible to be.
Many of our plants are in fact--especially the Alberta plants, because they're all new--the best in the world. Most of them are new, or the investments for a lot of them were in the 2000 period, and are the best in the world.
I would say it's a choice that a country has to make: we want Canada to develop these resources and upgrade them for employment reasons and any other reasons, or we want that growth and upgrading to go somewhere else, buy the products from China or the Middle East and bring them into Canada. Those are the choices we're going to face as an economy.
I come down on the side of saying I'm Canadian, I believe in Canada, and I don't see why we should not be growing our economy and why we should not be leaders in both economic performance and environmental performance. Certainly Alberta has incredible potential. The Alberta government recently announced a policy to help us extract ethane off the Alliance Pipeline. We can build that industry and be the best upgraders and environmental performers in the world. I have no doubt about that under our current performance.