Again, that's a very good question.
To put this in a bit of context, we've seen worldwide capital expenditure pull back when the price of oil goes from $95 a barrel to $30. Everybody has pulled back, but Canada has pulled back farther and deeper than anywhere else. Our percentage decline is deeper than the U.S.'s decline, deeper than Saudi Arabia's, and deeper than anywhere else. Part of that is the challenge we have of getting our products to market. Even at $25 a barrel, if you're producing right on the coast, that's not good. If you then have to subtract another $5 to $10 differential, it gets more difficult.
I think the thing we need to be concerned about is that if the price does bounce up to $50 a barrel, will Canada be competitive? Will we be attracting the investment at that point, or will it be going to the U.S., or Nigeria, or Venezuela? What we've seen is that proportionally more of it's going to Venezuela, Nigeria, Angola, and Saudi Arabia than was coming to Canada three, five, or ten years ago.
At $50 or $60 a barrel, we will see incremental increases in investment. As the price gets higher, it will increase. It's hard to put a finger on it. Some of the broader market access issues will be fundamental to leveraging that price increase.