So they just extended it to the renewables and other people to try to bring it on a level playing field. That's what I think they're trying to get to as they move forward.
On the question you had regarding the decision to build the refining capacity and the agreement that has been struck between the two companies, I can't comment about the commercial aspects of that, but one of the things that I think is important to put in context with this is, as you'll see in that list of upgraders I provided in the slides, we already upgrade in Canada 800,000 barrels a day of the 1.1 million we're producing; so we're upgrading about 72% already in Canada.
With the 14 additional upgraders that have been announced, which are on that chart, and that includes expansions of the existing ones as well as 10 new ones, if you put that along with our forecast for oil production at 3.5 million barrels a day, you're still going to see 3 million out of the 3.5 million being upgraded here in Canada. So you're getting close to or over 80% of that happening in Canada. It's not all going to happen in Canada, but the vast majority of it already is, and we'll continue to be doing that as we go forward.
The reason there was an agreement to happen with ConocoPhillips, as I understand the agreement, is because it was very easy for them to add a single facility, so a coker that takes the heavy oil to light oil, to their already existing refinery; the ones in Canada and Alberta are already doing much of that as it goes forward. So it is happening.