When we issue export orders, those are issued for a term of up to one year. So we don't look at them on a day-by-day basis and look at the weather and see what's going to happen.
What happened last year was very much a response to weather. It wasn't an issue of insufficient supply. There was lots of supply in North America, but the supply wasn't where it was needed.
Parties throughout the supply chain have taken all kinds of steps over the last year to make sure there isn't the same kind of response—weather is always an unknown—and to ensure that supply is where it's needed. They've done things like expanding underground storage in Alberta, in Sarnia; adding above ground storage all over the Midwest and in market areas; additional rail-loading facilities are being added in North America in Alberta, in the Midwest; distributors are adding trucks to their facilities; and encouraging customers to stock up early. They're doing all kinds of things to make sure that the propane is where it's needed if weather strikes again this coming winter.