Right, but that would be unusual. You've had experience with this, so you know what the....
What's confusing to me, then, is that we essentially haven't renewed or we haven't supplemented any more incentive for wind production. -South of the border, our largest competitor has increased—not just maintained or cut the program, but increased—their wind production by another 53%. In terms of other competitors around the world, such as China, we're producing one-seventh of what China is producing in wind power, which I think would strike many Canadians as strange. In general terms, we think of the Chinese producing a lot of coal-fired plants, that they're in a more nascent economy when it comes to energy and Canada should have the shiny new stuff. We're producing on a level of only one-seventh of what China produces, and we're spending much less per capita than our American counterparts.
Does this concern the department at all when we look at our competitive advantage in terms of the renewable energy market, where not only are we spending less, but the others are actually moving away from us? They're gaining in speed while we're staying still, which probably means we are falling behind.
What have I said that's incorrect?