Thank you for that.
In my remaining time, I'm sorry, I'm not going to get to you, Mr. Northrup, but I am curious about some questions, so hopefully I will get to you in round two.
Quickly to you, Mr. Angevine, with respect to the Fraser Institute, and I'm sorry you're here more on economic issues today than you are on necessarily the specifics we're talking about, which is this particular alternative oil and gas industry, various institutes in Washington have been calling on the President to remove subsidies from the oil and gas industry--heritage and other groups that are hardly tree huggers. I'm curious as to whether the Fraser Institute holds a similar view, in terms of the distortion of the market, of the current subsidies that go towards the oil and gas industry to enhance production and give them a leg up, if you will.
Secondly, why is there urgency to develop extremely large amounts of natural gas reserves at a time when prices are at near historical low levels? I don't understand. In your testimony, you talked about the need for speed. It seems to me that if prices are where they're at, if government doesn't offer up any subsidy to the industry, the market will simply decide that at $3, this isn't worth doing.