Okay, I'll try to take that one on.
I'm not sure about the House of Commons debates about.... But certainly, Canada's approach has been market-based. Typically, we have to respect the constitutional arrangements in Canada in which the provinces are the primary regulators of oil and gas development. So the ability of the federal government to intervene and impose particular activities has its limitations.
I think our experience with the energy sector has been that the market-based approach has served the country well. It responds to the nature of capital and to the nature of demand and supply and certainly has benefited greatly. My understanding and my relationship, since I have worked in the energy domain for some years, is that a number of the companies that operate here are global companies.
So the degree to which the government intervenes and dictates or suggests how things should or shouldn't happen tends to influence the investment decisions that are made. Since we are open and are certainly a country that accepts foreign investment, that investment competes globally. So whether it's Shell, Statoil, Exxon Mobil, Chevron, or whoever is active, the dollars they invest in Canada could be invested in the United States or India or Nigeria, or anywhere else around the world. So the degree to which those decisions are made or influenced, I think, is important, and having a market-based approach allows those decisions to occur.
With respect to the safety, I don't know if I can really comment as to whether it would be more or less. But there are pipelines that are built and that do ship gasoline, diesel, and finished products. We see that and we see tanker movements, rail movements, and truck movements, and certainly those exist today, though I can't comment to what degree. But crude oil is relatively inert when it's shipped, so that is an accurate statement.