I think Ben made the comment at the very beginning of his opening remarks that we have to remember who the target is here. This is not going after companies, per se. The target here is to try to fight corruption within governments, particularly in some countries around the world. We recognize that the penalties provision in here has a role to play, because if companies don't participate, it won't work. You need to ensure compliance with this act. But the way it's currently drafted, with the daily compounding penalty, we find that it's disproportionate to the nature of the offence. It's kind of sending the signal that we're the culprits here, when actually we're the solution. The culprits we're trying to get at are the governments that aren't transparently disclosing what they're doing with the funds that they receive from industry.
I would note, too, that the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers had a different way; I think their first recommendation addresses in a different way the same issue that we're raising in our first recommendation around penalties. I think there's a commonly shared concern around the way this particular aspect of the legislation has been addressed.