Right now energy costs are a big issue. I was at the auto summit yesterday, and I think it was the one issue that just about everybody brought up. On the other hand, I would say you could make the argument that the Ontario government is also doing something that the rest of the world needs to do by attacking this. I think the problem is that....
A very good point was made yesterday by a gentleman from the Canadian motor vehicle association, saying that if we make the electricity prices so high in Ontario that we drive producers to U.S. states that use coal-fired plants, then we would actually have the net impact of increasing carbon emissions. I think there needs to be some rethinking about electricity.
There are disadvantages in not having the same access that, for example, Mexico has, and you're always going to have that cost disadvantage. If you then get into a situation such that a Canadian assembly plant is going to sell cars into the United States under NAFTA rules of origin, while a Mexican plant can sell cars into the United States under TPP rules of origin, which would mean they could have some lower price content from some other places, it's going to be one more competitive disadvantage.