If we had had a discussion 15 years ago, we would have talked about a completely different picture. As you remember, before there was shale gas and shale oil. This is a sector that is evolving quite quickly.
I think there's still a market for the LNG; that's for sure. That's what we're hearing. We get comments and questions from Asia, and it continues to be a big interest.
We're also getting a lot of interest in hydrogen, as was mentioned, on using gas to transform to hydrogen. I don't necessarily think the market is down. If you look at, as was mentioned before, the CER and what it say in its report, it also includes a significant portion of fossil energy that will be part of our mix in 2050. That would be the case in other countries, so there is a market for the energy. As was mentioned, however, if we want to get access to those markets, we're going to have to have the best in class, and as you know, that's what's happening with the big LNG projects in British Columbia.
If you want, I can turn to Glenn, who's the ADM on energy, if he wants to add something.