The New Zealand plan is a 30-year plan. I think it's a sensible time horizon to have a sort of sense of it. We can focus a lot on the infrastructure, but the fact of the matter is that when we talk about infrastructure we're really talking about the future. What does the future look like? What infrastructure do we have to start building today in anticipation of that future in such a way that we can nudge the future in the direction in which we want to prosper, taking security, environment, trade routes, and all these sorts of things into account?
I think that taking a broad view.... New Zealand's is 30 years, but it's a different form of government there in the sense that it's a smaller country and it's probably easier to do a 30-year time horizon there than it would be for Canada with its federal-provincial dynamics. Nevertheless, a longer term would I think be very helpful.