That would help immensely--absolutely.
You can still apply some very stringent criteria and you'll get consistency as well. Once we have this pilot established, as Chief Cranmer said, we're going to provide the information for no cost, through workshops and through maybe licensing agreements—where the licence fee will be a dollar—to anybody who wants to take us up on the offer. It will basically be a template on how you build these things and how you operate them to get the maximum economic efficiency out of the machine.
If an investment group wants to take that free information, which normally would cost them a lot of money to procure, and they want to line up private investors, that would be one avenue. If they can't for some reason line up private money, or they don't have access to it, you could have a second fund provided by government or a philanthropic organization like Tides, which could basically ensure the money was spent and the governance was in place.