Yes, there are liability limits in other countries. They're set at various levels. Some may be more outrageous than Canada's. Those aren't the ones I'm focusing on. If the industry internationally has proven it is capable of operating without a liability limit, then that's where I want to focus and that's where I have focused.
If I can add one other point, Ontario Power Generation has proven it can operate with unlimited liability because it does so now with its hydroelectric facilities, including a dam that is hovering upstream of Ottawa, and including in its gas facilities its natural-gas-fired generating stations, some of which are in highly populated environments. There is no law from the federal government or the provincial government that caps their liability. Their liability is only capped by the damage their plant might do on a bad day, so we're not talking about requiring an infinite insurance policy. That might be impossible, but just saying that victims will have the right to compensation without limit, only limited by their damages, that seems to me common sense, and that shouldn't stop OPG from doing anything. If it does, it's because they're scared of what their plant might do on a bad day, and if they're scared, you should be scared.