If you're giving an example, now that the Montreal refinery has shut down, what's your relevant market? I'm not asking these things to bait you, sir. What I'm trying to do is demonstrate why now, more than ever, there probably is great need for what Mr. Vincent has suggested.
No one has done an updated analysis of this industry as it currently exists, given the number of refineries that have quit or left, many of which have done so, as I pointed out, for governmental and environmental reasons. When we make these things onerous, they don't necessarily make economic sense. The impact is that we have lock-step, uniform wholesale prices in Canada, which do not exist in Europe, Australia, New Zealand, Asia, or the United States. So Canadians are right to ask how, if we are dealing with what appear to be monopoly prices or similar prices, we can conclude anything other than that there is a monopoly here. Obviously they need to worry about collusion or conspiracy, because the same several players get together in the dark of night to fix prices.
If they don't exist at the wholesale level, and there's only one player calling the shots, aren't we talking about an outmoded piece of legislation? Wouldn't his investigative powers actually allow the bureau, once and for all, to understand the industry as it exists today?