Well, it's the same.
The first comment I would make, though, is that we're not necessarily built for surplus capacity. We tend to design and build our airports just in time; we like to be just ahead of the demand curve.
There are really two things at play. As YVR grows and adds a Sydney non-stop or a Melbourne non-stop, that's been very good for the Victoria business market. It's a quick connection away. It opens up tourism. It opens up trade.
What you will eventually see domestically—those are hub airports, in a way, and the hubs will always continue—is that at certain times of the day in certain markets, you will start to pull off and fly non-stop. You will see increases, I think first in more intra-Canada domestic non-stop flights. Victoria-Montreal was launched for the first time this year with Air Canada. There is increased Toronto frequency, increased prairie frequencies. Then you will start to grow more into the U.S. markets.
I think it will be a while before we see long-haul international. It's probably 10 or 20 years away.