I would have to agree. The western approach is shorter and cheaper if your purpose is just to get to foreign markets, but given the amount of oil we're importing and the price differential between domestic prices and foreign prices—because we are importing oil at foreign prices—there would be significant benefits to having the refineries in eastern Canada using domestic oil rather than foreign oil. We could do both, as I said in my presentation.
Again, you're talking about an increase of roughly three million barrels a day in production coming out of the oil sands over the next 20 years or so. The eastern and central Canadian importing needs right now are only about 700,000 barrels a day, so we could easily meet domestic demand and still have lots left over for exports.