The way it works right now is that we do have pipeline capacity all the way to Montreal. Again, line 9 from Montreal moves from east to west. Some have been speculating that Enbridge may eventually apply to have that reversed. They haven't yet. I can't really comment on whether or not that would be reversed; it's a market decision. But it is possible. That infrastructure is there.
In Montreal, again, I guess it's what they call “barges”; basically they're moving crude into Montreal right now. They could possibly..... I mean, theoretically they could be moving it out of Montreal.
You also have for Montreal the pipeline that goes from Portland to Montreal. It flows in that direction right now. I know there's been speculation; I believe there was even an application at one point in the past, in the recent past, to reverse that. That's a two-300,000-barrel-per-day pipeline, so that's 600,000 barrels per day of capacity, which would link Montreal to the eastern seaboard. At that point they could.... I mean, again it's theoretical; you're asking what pipelines are there, and that pipeline is there. Portland is on tidewater. It could be serving the U.S. east coast and the Canadian east coast by ship as well.