I'll try to address that. I'll go back to the 10 oil commandments created by the standing committee of the Parliament of Norway in 1971.
It stated very clearly that oil and gas development should benefit all Norwegians. It stated that it should create a region-owned oil and gas industry—also one for the supply and delivery platforms—and we have done so.
Today, we export to the world from this industry. We don't only make money on oil and gas by producing it, but also produce the equipment needed for other nations, other provinces, other states, to make their own production viable in an environmentally friendly way.
The issue of jobs was raised earlier, and I tried to make a comment. My understanding is that Alberta imports labour today. Norway does the same. We have gone from four million to five million people in Norway in a very short time, so as to be able to deliver what we need for the oil and gas industry and also export. It's not so much for producing it, because they do that with less labour: automation has taken over.
The lady who set up the videoconference today is Swedish. She's Swedish first generation, coming from the Middle East—Scandinavia has imported people, like Canada. Norway is now filled with Indians, and Swedes, Polish people, Baltic nations people, Russians.... We need them.
We have Canadians coming in and taking good engineering jobs. You're losing them in Canada; we're getting them. Labour and competence is part of the competition. But we have also shipped some Norwegians to Calgary to develop the tar sands.