Let me speak to the energy intensity thing.
The problem we're trying to deal with when we're dealing with greenhouse gases is a global problem. Some of you will have seen recently that Alcan has decided to build a million-tonne-a-year aluminum refinery in South Africa, because of the power contract they could write with Eskom, the big utility—bigger than Ontario Hydro. I don't know what it is today, but 10 years ago it produced 85% of all the electricity produced on the continent of Africa. They do this with dirty coal.
If the world wants another million tonnes of aluminum a year, and if you do it in Canada and supply half, two-thirds, or all of it from a new hydro source, the Canadian economy is very much more energy intensive, but you've dealt with the international problem.
Canada should never apologize for being energy intensive. The things we do that make us an energy-intensive country are things that we do better than most other people on the planet, and we do it with less greenhouse gas burden on the environment.
When you look at the country, if you're really trying to deal with a global problem, then you have to look at what you're doing in a global context. Deciding to make the aluminum powered by dirty coal in South Africa is a step backwards, not a step forward in the cause.