Okay.
Mr. Allen, at this committee and the new special committee that is being struck on climate change, we're looking very seriously at the CO2 emissions issue. Of course, within that, if we look at real emissions reductions in Canada, it's going to come down on the expansion of the oil sands. My sense is that in the operation you're conducting at a regional level right now, your economic opportunities are escaping, just by the magnitude of what you're dealing with.
Have you done studies to determine the expansion you need to maintain a certain level of growth and prosperity in your community? We went from 1990, at 300,000 barrels a day, to 2000, at 900,000 barrels a day. We're now talking about hitting 3.5 million barrels a day by 2015. Those were the figures given to us by the National Energy Board, CAPP, and a number of the others.
Have you done that work, to understand where the profitability of the region and the businesses and the economy would be best served by expansion in the industry?