Those are good questions. You've rhymed off all of the competitors to Canada: Qatar, Australia, Russia. The United States is a competitor as well. All of those countries, with the exception of Canada and the United States, are already LNG-producing countries and sell into the Asian market and into markets in Europe. The projections for growth of LNG are fairly substantive going into 2020 and out to 2035. I think calling it a race probably trivializes it a bit, but there is certainly an important timeliness component to capturing the LNG markets.
Today, there are, as I mentioned, six projects in Canada. There are 18 in the United States. Australia has, I think, seven that are under way, and Qatar is looking at doubling its capacity. So there are a growing number of countries doing the work that needs to be done to create the opportunity to sell into the growing markets in Asia for liquefied natural gas.