I think that's the key question. It's a question of competitiveness and treatment at the border. The EU, as you know, is considering carbon taxes. Our company is out talking about border carbon taxes. I don't know that we have to go to that extent, but there has to be a recognition of where carbon is being generated.
You're right; it has been part of the testimony to this committee that Chinese steel, for example, generates three times the CO2 per tonne that Canadian steel does. That includes not just the production of the steel; it's the transport of coal from Australia to China, all of that.