I don't use U.S. data as much as Canadian data, but, yes, that does exist in the United States. Prior to the U.S. EIA's formation, there were a multitude of agencies at the federal level that collected data. That was one of the reasons the EIA was brought in. It was also brought in in response to the Iranian oil embargo and all that stuff to provide better clarity.
There is state-level data that we make use of, North Dakota's and others, but my understanding is there were more nascent oil-producing regions at the beginning, and when they began the process of collecting data, the EIA was there to help them to ensure alignment at that point in time. There are similarities, but it's temporally different. They're in a different place, because the EIA has been around for so long at this point. It is a clearing house of data for the U.S. in energy, but it is also a fundamentally a different market. It's one of the world's largest energy-consuming regions. We are not, so it's a little bit different.