In the context of the border carbon adjustment, it's really about the costs, or the carbon charges, the large emitters are facing, which are subject to border carbon measures. In this country, most provinces are running their own system. Alberta has had their large emitter program since 2007. They're running their own system, so they make their own decisions on the share of emissions that are charged and the cost imposed by industry. When you look at any single sector in the country, you see it's very fragmented. It's all over the place. The relative charge paid has a big distribution.
We have a domestic competitiveness issue, but we also have a problem with saying to the EU or the Americans what we're paying on average. Pulling that information together requires the feds and the provinces to work together to disclose and collect information so we can put it in front of the regulators that are driving these border adjustments.