I did briefly see that article you're referring to. There's no doubt about it. Part of the oil that's coming from western Canada to eastern Canada will be shipped offshore. However, we do have Canada's largest oil refinery, and we can be darn sure that the owners of that refinery are not just interested in seeing a pipeline land at their shore and at their facility, of which they are a member of the joint venture to operate, just for the purposes of shipping it offshore.
The opportunity to have a supply—which is non-threatening—from western Canada is obviously a great opportunity for eastern Canada, but also, those in the industry clearly tell us that the possibility of other petroleum-based industries being developed as a result of this source of crude oil coming to the Saint John area is immense. This supply is going to definitely create direct jobs, indirect jobs, and induced jobs—huge numbers. However, the opportunity to diversify in the petroleum industry is also immense. This is the beginning.
There will always be markets offshore to send our oil to, but let me tell you, the refinery in Saint John is not known for just receiving oil and shipping it elsewhere. They take it, they refine it, and they add value to it, and that industry in itself creates direct and indirect jobs. Then they ship the finished product to other parts of North America.
The position that all we're doing is receiving oil and shipping it elsewhere without taking it, using it, and adding value to it to me is overstated. The opportunity is there now to do it and there's greater potential for the future.