Currently, there is none.
We've appeared consistently on virtually every project over the last number of years, and jobs are not considered. They are not a criterion. They are not even considered a public interest. It's as simple as that.
I mentioned earlier that the left hand doesn't know what the right hand is doing right now.
Last night I was talking to our representatives in the Chevron refinery in Burnaby, B.C. This refinery refines 60,000 barrels of oil a day. It's a small refinery, very small, but it's only one of two refineries left in B.C. There is a very small Husky refinery up around Prince George that refines about 11,000 barrels—it's small and services the local market. But in the lower mainland of B.C. it's the only refinery left. This March, the refinery will be curtailing production by 20,000 barrels. Why? Lack of feedstock. I thought we had the second largest proven reserves and were the Saudi Arabia of the new world.
Why couldn't they get the 20,000 barrels? Because the National Energy Board gave permission to—I believe the name is Kinder Morgan—the pipeline operator to actually auction off the oil. So they got out-bid by a better offer. I don't know if it was from China or maybe from India. I don't know. The consequence is that that refinery not only is curtailing, but, according to our information, all options are on the table. All options are on the table. In our jargon, that's what Shell said before they shut the refinery down in Montreal.
There you go. Lack of feedstock.