We have an excellent working relationship with the Government of Alberta because we're so important. They have conflicting goals. They have the environmental goal and they also have a value-added industry goal. We're the value-added industry.
Yes, uncertainty is a big deal. One of the things we talk about is—we may get it in Alberta only—a greenhouse target. We may have a Canada-only greenhouse target, and we'll meet that, but we'll fail the world greenhouse gas target because, if our industry is displaced, it will move on to China, which is a coal-fed, very bottom-quartile industry, and they'll pick up the market. We have to look at world targets, not just provincial and federal targets. That's one of our messages, but we are working very closely....
The other side—and why I spend so much time on it is I'm hoping that it's becoming embedded in your mind—is the 4R sustainable stewardship program.
It's a killer application. Everyone's talking about the cap side of things; this is the trade part of it. It's recognized worldwide, but we're having a hard time getting recognition sometimes with the federal government. We are working with them. It's recognized, as I said, in some pockets, but we need to work with the Department of the Environment for them to recognize what the agriculture sector does in terms of giving credits to greenhouse gases.