I have spent an enormous amount of time with our European colleagues and in Europe. We have endeavoured to do everything we can to support them, including expanding oil and gas production this year by 300,000 barrels a day alongside our American friends doing likewise. We are on track to achieving that.
We certainly continue to look at the issue of exporting liquid natural gas to Germany from the east coast, but the economics are more challenging because of the distance. There are potentially ways to get around that, but the biggest barrier, as I said before, is the American regulatory system and the challenges there.
Canada has enormous opportunities to be a clean energy supplier to the world. That includes going through this transition of oil and gas and eventually hydrogen derived from oil and gas. We are very focused on that, but there is a fundamental underpinning there: To be relevant in the context of the transition that is going on, we need to be driving down emissions from the oil and gas sector. Just as with every other sector, this is in the economic interest of that sector, and if you talk to the Pathways Alliance folks, they would agree with that.