I felt I could respond to a couple of other elements of your question, Mr. Harris. I certainly agree with the concept of large-scale perspective and everything in balance, and I agree with the concept of recognizing a natural treasure in the boreal forest and a national economic treasure in the oil sands, and with a large-scale perspective getting the right balance.
But regarding your question with respect to bison, is it realistic to anticipate herds of large ungulates grazing on reclaimed land, certainly from everything we've seen the answer is yes. The bison initiative at Syncrude had two very different elements to it. One was research, and again, coming back to this question of the safety of a reclaimed landscape, so we grazed animals on the pasture and tracked the health of those animals to a very sophisticated level--accumulation of anything, or whatever. So there was definitely a research element, but in addition to that with the bison, we are working collaboratively with the community of Fort McKay, the Fort McKay First Nation, to help them explore, without any sort of preconception as to what the right answer is, potential benefits, potential value from reclaimed land to that community. And the herd of bison could well lead to a commercial ranching activity, but we have no preconceptions. It could lead to an ecotourism opportunity or it could lead to a supply of country food that is perhaps particularly abundant.
So without preconceptions, we're working with the community on a range of possible opportunities. I am out wearing a bison pin today.