It's not inconceivable. The Europeans are moving very quickly on, and already have moved on, a very large-scale integration of renewables. You're seeing 40% to 50% of energy output in major European countries coming from wind and solar principally. There are other sources as well. That seems to be where the Europeans are heading strategically. They've kind of been burned, as it were, for having relied on an external energy source around their transition.
There's a kind of convergence of climate, energy security and energy transition in Europe, which is quite different from how we are thinking about things in Canada. Their perspective is very much one of a fossil fuel consumer, as opposed to a producer. That has very strongly informed their strategies, with the additional experience of geopolitical risk around this situation.
In Canada, our dynamics are different, but the need to decarbonize is just as imperative. As I've said, I do worry that we have an awful lot of eggs in the CCUS basket. For a variety of reasons, that raises some very significant risks in my mind.