I've looked at the law governing you, and yes, it doesn't give you much latitude to refuse a permit. Perhaps the environmental effects of the proposed exportation and any social effects that might come from that, but that's a pretty limited field when it comes to supply of this product. To claim an environmental impact, I suppose, would be interesting.
In the north, with this propane price jumping up and down, I guess one of the reasons that it's so critical—it's only 1% of consumers who use propane—is that propane is very expensive. It has an equivalency, a BTU cost that's much higher than natural gas, for instance, and in many cases it comes up to the level of fuel oil, which in northern Canada is a destructive force in our cost of living.
So you can understand that people who are on propane as a residential heating product have great concerns when the price goes up. Wouldn't you say that? Because they're not dealing with the difference between $4 a gig and $5 a gig for natural gas, they're dealing with a cost that might run up to $1,000 a month to heat their home.