Mr. Chairman, no, I do not expect that we are going to get the same arrangement as Alberta. I do not think anyone in Canada will get that arrangement again. I still think that we will see significant revenues. In the budget speech, I used a very conservative figure of $200 million. I think a lot of people would say that is much too conservative. In fact, I heard that from the oil and gas people on Sunday.
I do not want to be overly optimistic in predicting how much resource revenues we are going to get. I think that can be pretty disappointing in the end as well. I would sooner err on the conservative side.
How much we will see out of the Northwest Territories? I said $200 million out of existing developments. If we see huge fines, a pipeline down the Mackenzie Valley and continued high prices in the gas industry, then it could be a lot more than that.
I hope that through the negotiations on resource revenue sharing devolution that we see an agreement that is efficiently generous and fair with the federal government to give our government a reasonable allocation, the aboriginal self-governments a reasonable allocation, and the federal government, of course, would be getting some piece of that. To be on the conservative side...$200 million is safe. It is conservative.
I think on the others, and maybe I will have Mr. Voytilla mention a bit of it, in terms of the performance of our formula later on down the road here, looking at what we predict.