Today, the refineries in eastern Canada, whether they're in Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, or Newfoundland, operate using imported crude. Those refineries employ Canadians and continue to employ Canadians and are doing reasonably well, but their margins and their efforts are fairly tight given that the global energy price they pay and the markets they work in are fairly competitive.
Certainly, accessing Canadian crude or western crude, or even crude from the northern midwest of the United States, whether it's Bakken or Canadian crude, offers a stable supply of it and also the ability for some of those dollars that transfer between the acquisition of the crude and the seller to remain within the North American context. I think that the more profitable, the more marketable, and the more stable we can make the refinery business, the more likely it is that the jobs will remain in Canada, that we won't see us importing more product, and that we'll see the opportunities there for refineries to continue. There is—