We should certainly contest those governments that do it. It is a subsidy. It is certainly not something that is going to assist companies in the long term in being competitive. There are other ways of assisting industry and making those adjustments—part of what we've been talking about before—and making sure that we have a tax system that doesn't act as a disincentive to those investments, or for that matter a set of environmental regulations that don't punish companies for making the progress they've been making in energy efficiency and greenhouse reduction, for example. Those are positive steps we could look at to facilitate some of that transition, some of the efficiency improvement here.
But we get into big trouble if we're trying to manipulate a global marketplace. It's like the issue of trying to control the price of the dollar. The price of the dollar is not really being set by many forces we have control over; it's being set by international commodity/energy prices, and above all by the weakness of the U.S. dollar. There's not a lot we can do except make sure the adjustment process is as easy as possible for Canadian business.