I have a question on the notion of liability. Again, I'm trying to be somewhat objective and think of this as an asset that the Canadian government is trying to privatize.
Point Lepreau is a good example. They estimate that the cost to ratepayers in New Brunswick is $1 million a day. If I were selling this asset I would try to minimize my liabilities and promote the best parts of it. As a buyer I would not want to be picking up any potential liabilities.
There's a series of old reactors around this country that AECL has some liability toward. There are also waste and contamination issues that are extraordinarily expensive. You've put $500 million aside.
I assume that's included, Mr. Wallace, in the subsidies I asked about earlier. Some wouldn't call it a subsidy, but cleaning up the waste from the production of that power would seem to be part of the complement of public subsidy toward the technology.
The review is going on right now within government. The government is looking at different ways to privatize AECL. Is there not a risk that all or many of those liabilities will simply be taken off-book in the sale and eventually held by the Canadian government, the Canadian taxpayer, and the good parts that might actually make somebody some money will be all that's up for sale?
That's an extraordinary concern for me and many others around this table.