In 2006 the share of natural gas probably would be something around three-quarters of that number.
Let me just throw out one comment.
In the old days when one talked about reserves, reserves were very important because they back-stopped contracts. In today's oil and gas industry, it's not reserves that are the critical issue, it's the number of holes in the ground or the number of wells that you can complete. So having 4,000, or 14,000 trillion cubic feet is a nice number, but what we need to do is drill something in.... Our forecast is now suggesting we will drill 5,000 natural gas wells per year in the coming years. We need to double that in order to regrow our market share in natural gas, and that development of wells is primarily focused on northeast B.C., and in Alberta.