I think there are two things that have changed, and they're both very important to note.
The first is that if you went back a decade ago, Canada was not on anybody's short list for investments in the chemistry industry. As much as we might have wanted it and gave the right signals, it wasn't on anybody's short list. Now when these global companies are looking for places to make their next $8-billion investment or $10-billion investment, Canada is actually on that list. They're coming to talk to Alberta, to Ottawa, to Ontario. It's discussed. It's one of the two or three that they look at.
However, it isn't number one, and that's the other part of that question. What has changed is that the competition has become more and more intense. As we've moved the goalposts, others have moved as well, and we haven't necessarily been keeping up.
That's not just a critique of the federal government. I think it's across the board in how we approach economic and manufacturing development. There doesn't seem to be a lot of synergies between efforts at the provincial level and at the federal level. Certainly between places like Sarnia or Guelph and the provincial governments I believe there are, but at times there's a disconnect between Ottawa and the provinces.