The key there is that we have to have another customer, so that market diversification will allow us not to suffer a discount or see inefficiencies in the market such as we have seen over the past couple of years with the flood of crude oil at Cushing.
That was a good example of what some people are talking about today. If you flood a local market with cheap crude oil, you can bolster your refining industry, but as soon as that margin disappears.... It's essentially a false economy.
We have to find efficient markets as crude producers, in which we can get the maximum value for our crude oil. That market may be in the U.S.; it has been for a large number of years—that's why pipelines all go there. But now, the growing energy market is in Asia, and we need to access the prices there.