Thanks very much, Mr. Chair.
Thank you to our presenters.
I'm going to go back to you, Ms. Marsh, and then I will go to Mr. Giraud for a comment on the question I'm going to pose. It has to do with competitiveness and the window of opportunity.
I think Mr. Giraud will be able to comment because Woodfibre was living through it. My understanding is that you thought you had a certain date, Mr. Giraud, when the government would say yea or nay to your project. The election happened, which meant you had to wait, but then all of a sudden there were five new principles, which fortunately you had already gone through. These were five new steps that you had to go through.
Ms. Marsh, in the business world, when a business enters into an agreement with a certain set of rules and expectations and then those change midway through the process, what signal would that typically send? I know that your president, Mr. Beatty, had some comments about that. Can you tell us what that's doing and how that's negatively impacting the oil and gas sector?