Senator WONG (South Australia—Minister for Foreign Affairs and Leader of the Government in the Senate) (14:42): Thank you, Senator Bell. I've been here long enough to see people campaign in the Senate for state elections and for by-elections, and I can say to you that I've never seen it actually have an effect on the ground, but you go your hardest. That's fine. Secondly, the point I would make in terms of the track record of the government—Senator Gallagher went through it, I think, very clearly in the question she answered—is that it is our government that established domestic fuel reserves for diesel, for petrol and for jet fuel. It is our government that put a gas reservation in place so more affordable gas goes to Australian households and industries. We introduced minimum stockpiling obligations so we could withstand energy supply shocks, and that does stand in contrast to Mr Taylor's decision, while he was the minister, to put Australian fuel reserves in Texas. Senator Ayres: Like Waco. Senator WONG: I would—sorry. I apologise. The minister is distracting me. Senator WONG: What I would say to you though, Senator, is the same thing I said to Senator O'Sullivan, which is that the advice to us very clearly is that we have as much fuel coming through our ports now as we did before the war began. It is the case that there is demand in some areas of our country, regional areas but also in some different sectors, which differs from the normal patterns of demand. Obviously, that does create a mismatch between supply and demand. It is a function of differing demand patterns, not a function of supply, and we would encourage the parliament to be responsible in how they engage with industry on this, given the national interest. The PRESIDENT: Senator Bell, first supplementary?