In my opinion, the dirty bomb scenario—
This is again in Canada. A lot of people come here with this junk science, to be blunt, about a dirty bomb.
First of all, in Canada, to try to create a dirty bomb, you would have to have access. It's very difficult to actually get your hands on our facilities. They are very secure and guarded. There is a very low probability, a low risk, that someone could get in and try to actually get a hold of some of the material to create a dirty bomb.
Again, I have said that I'm not an expert in insurance, but it seems to me that in the airline industry or the car industry you count the number of incidents and you actually come up with some sort of assessment of risk.
To put Chernobyl in the same situation as Canada is outrageous. TMI never, ever released, so the system worked. In Canada, in the last 63 years, we have never had such a system. In fact we are managing to make sure that no such system occurs. So I don't understand how the probability here would lead you to another kind of conclusion.