Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you to our witnesses.
With the number of witnesses we have, it limits my ability to get to everybody, so I'll focus on some of the things that might be relevant in the Yukon. Of course, we're looking at liquefied natural gas up north. I see on your map that it's one of the only places in the country that doesn't have a dot on it right now, so we probably need to change that.
On your graph on page 7, it looks like your industrial use of natural gas seems to consistently take up the greatest bulk from 1980 to 2012, and then commercial and residential use has a pretty substantial piece of that pie. It seems as though all of them have maintained a similar growth rate. It's hard to really see, in the way that graph is lined up, but it looks like they've all grown proportionately the same.
When you look at diversification, would it be fair to say industry would drive the market first and then residential picks up because there's industry access, or do they come hand in hand? How does that play out in terms of where it diversifies within the country?