There is a distortion in the market when you don't have sufficient capacity to give the market choice. We've seen it before at other points in history when a shortage—whether it's a highway capacity to move manufactured products or pipeline capacity—will cause a deterioration in the prices that one can get.
We're always further ahead in Canada to have a little bit too much pipeline capacity rather than a bit too little. Right now we have too little and that is costing us in the order of $50 million per day. The numbers will vary slightly, depending on the actual commodity prices as they move through the year, but I think that's a reasonable estimate. You heard similar numbers from the Conference Board as well.
It's very grave when you put it up against the fact that a large new pipeline can be constructed for considerably less than what you lose in a given year. So the macroeconomics of the delay are problematic for Canada.