Again, as Mr. Nelson mentioned, on the $1.4 billion, I don't know where it went.
The oil sands industry has an approach with side issues whereby, since they are not generating revenue, they are left on a schedule that is not very short. This is where government should come in and impose a timeline.
Luckily, in 2009 Alberta put through directive 074. If you look at the oil sands expansion and what they are deemed to be going for by 2030, there is not much space left to build tailings ponds. Suncor presently has an issue in where a plant can be set up on its lease, because tailings ponds take up so much area. The world's largest man-made dam is the Mildred Lake dam, which is holding back toxic waters. It's unfortunate that engineers conceive to go ahead and build structures as such rather than treat those wastes and eliminate them.
There is potential to go ahead and eliminate waste. The way to incite it, if the government wants to put a timeframe, would be to say, “Listen, you are going to clean up your image. You are going to be more efficient. You are not going to be producing waste. You are going to be generating a revenue stream and maximizing a resource out of that waste.”
That's the focus where government should go ahead and be involved. They should look very seriously at innovative technologies, assist them, and take a role whereby they would collaborate and coordinate all of the effort for the industry. The bottom line is that we can export low-carbon fuel, not dirty oil, into the United States. The way to do it is to recover the waste heat, increase our efficiency, eliminate waste, and demonstrate that we are socially responsible with our resources for future generations.