I'm not sure, as a small business owner, that I'm necessarily in a great position to answer that question.
Certainly within the context of energy efficiency, that is an incentive for energy efficiency. There's a larger question obviously. Your point is more about total energy costs. It remains that because the B.C. grid—and it sounds as if the one in Ontario as well—is largely carbon-free. One thing I would mention is that the cost of energy is rising for a lot of reasons that are not related to carbon tax.
I would say the majority is not carbon tax-related, because as I said, despite the carbon tax, gas costs much less today in B.C. than it did in 2008, for example, prior to the last recession. It was up to $15 or $16 a gigajoule. The price of gas today for most commercial customers is, even with the carbon tax, $7 or $8 a gigajoule, much less than before. That's simply an issue of supply and demand.
There are a lot of fluctuations that are, as I said, not related. The price of electricity has gone up quite significantly, and it's largely carbon-free. I think it would be a mistake to kind of pin a lot of this on the carbon tax.