Yes, we did release a report this summer talking about clean growth and essentially arguing that we need to find a better way of balancing economic opportunities, especially in Atlantic Canada, with the environment. As part of that study, we did also highlight greenhouse gas emissions related to transportation. These issues can overlap. If different provinces are implementing different carbon pricing systems, one of our concerns was that it was going to add to and further complicate these differences that we already have on basic transportation regulation.
A harmonized or an Atlantic approach would help minimize different provinces having different carbon prices or fuel taxes as part of what adds another layer of difference. Again, companies are trying to get the goods from A to B. They're not looking at the provincial barriers between that, but they have to build that into their pricing and they have to make sure they are compliant with different provincial standards, whether it's on weights or whether it's on environmental and carbon pricing.