Thank you.
With regard to the cost to capital, the one thing that's going to affect the cost to capital here, of course, is the uncertainty that this government's going to visit upon a buyer or that suddenly the status quo will change, as it does repeatedly with this government and its policies towards the oil and gas industry. Therefore, any buyer is going to require a guarantee that the ground isn't going to shift beneath their feet. That guarantee is going to have to be given by this government, which is going to be a cost.
Further to that, there are two parts to tolls. There's the fixed part of tolls and there's the variable part of tolls. If we oil production in Canada reduced by one million barrels a day, that fixed part of the tolls would be shared among a smaller number of barrels. Therefore, that fixed cost would go up and that would impact Canadian economic activity.
Have you calculated how much that would reduce Canadian economic activity?