I agree with you, Mr. Macerollo, in terms of where this price is going and that we do follow New York harbour as the benchmark, as we do with crude. But the analogy you're giving with gasoline is that it's always 2¢ to 7¢ a litre higher in Canada. We can't trade the product either side of the border. Substitution would only be a penny or two. How is it possible then to make a contention, as you've just done, that it's acceptable and that we don't control that price differential? It seems to me that if Canadians are producing gasoline, the market would bear, say, 68¢ a litre today, not 72¢ in my region or in places like Montreal.
Mr. Baily, you may want to jump in on this as well.