There are two stages of jobs. Let's talk first about direct jobs, and then related jobs.
If Keystone were to go ahead today, there would be about 3,000 to 3,500 construction jobs in Canada in this section from Hardisty to the U.S. border for three seasons. The direct construction in the United States for Keystone would involve about 20,000 jobs. It makes a lot of sense, because the majority of the pipeline is in the U.S. But the jobs afterwards in the extraction, upgrading, and construction industry down the road would make a big difference.
Producers in Alberta would build and grow their facilities in order to fill that pipeline with product. That's where the jobs for Canada would come from. The jobs for Canada wouldn't really come in large numbers from the construction of the pipeline. It's the 50-year jobs that come afterwards. It's all the tertiary effects of the oil sands employment afterwards. It's in the hundreds of thousands that's calculated after a project like Keystone is completed. It's billions of dollars to Canada's GDP.