If you're talking about the fire at the Petro-Canada refinery in February, the Competition Act can't protect refineries from fires. They happen to be very dangerous places. That is a natural event that would not be within anybody's control. They do happen quite frequently. They are dangerous places. That was a blip for about a month that I think it went through, and supply did come in and rectify that balance.
But unless the industry is prepared to have 10%, 20%, or 30% idle capacity...refineries run at about 95% capacity, they cost about $5 billion to make, and they take 12 years to make. There has been an announcement recently that Shell would like to build a new refinery in Sarnia. If that refinery gets built, such an event as you described would not affect the price the way it did in February.