Mr. Scott, other than very narrow situations, which are very important and have to be dealt with in a manner that addresses the issues, the railways are very environmentally friendly. We are four times more environmentally friendly than trucking in terms of emissions. We are four to five times more fuel-efficient. It is a lot safer to put dangerous material on rail than it is on any other mode.
Railroads are 100% privately funded. We're not asking for money. We're operating for the benefit of Canada, and we are a very capital-intensive business. We make a lot of money and that's a good thing, because every year we have to invest substantial sums to maintain that railroad, increase the capacity, and serve our customers.
I hear you on the notion that with success comes responsibility, and we take that very seriously. But at the same time, you would not want to have a law that creates the equivalent of expropriating an asset without due compensation or forcing a railroad to provide a subsidy. The price signals must be right. We agree that the agency, in its wisdom, will make the right decisions and take the public interest into account when they set the rates. You should just not make the mistake of giving them a criterion that binds their hands if the criterion is not the right one.
We will be happy to provide Mr. McGuinty, the chairman, and other members of this committee with all of the details as to why net book value does not work. We don't dispute the cost of capital of the agency if that's what's to be used, we just dispute the base of the assets at historical prices, given that they have existed since the early 1900s.