That question was asked in the litigation I adverted to earlier. The litigation for the plaintiffs, whom I represented, indicated that depending on the assumptions about the kind of accident, the direction of the wind—all those things make a big difference—the liability could range between $375 million and $30 billion. The expert who talked about the $30 billion noted that was probably, in some circumstances, an underestimate. As I indicated, the Ontario Hydro evidence in that same case, using the same assumption of an escape from containment type of accident, was $10 billion, based on U.S. modelling. So in both cases, that was greater.
I might add that the Price-Anderson act in the United States, which offers $9 billion to $12 billion, depending on which exchange rate you use, reached that level because of the experience, in part, of Three Mile Island and the recognition that if there were an accident in which radioactive materials escaped containment, the pre-existing provision of compensation would be insufficient. What they did was to pile up a number of kinds of coverage in order to reach that total available number of resources.