There's a moral and environmental and local economic case to be made for LNG. It's been made probably a hundred different ways in the last two years. Again, there's reducing emissions from the burning of coal, which is very clear; increasing the economy in B.C., western Canada and perhaps also in Newfoundland and Quebec; obviously, with lots of indigenous ownership and participation in many of these LNG projects, it's certainly opening that up; and then, obviously, it's good for Canada's economy and productivity, since the GDP per capita has been declining.
Increasing LNG—as the United States has done, as Australia has done, as Qatar has done—as Asian companies increase their LNG import capacity and as European companies increase their LNG import capacity and make decades-long contracts with Middle Eastern countries, obviously, everyone would prefer if Canada could be their supplier.