Absolutely. I have a couple of thoughts on that point.
First, on that adoption and piloting type of scenario, I think there are ways that.... If you set up things like the CANMET lab, for example, in Alberta, which is specifically for oil sands-related technologies, it's built; it's there specifically for those kinds of technologies at that phase. You're not picking winners. You're bringing them in and allowing them to use the facilities to scale up the technology. If you're getting a little bit downstream on that, certainly there would need to be fairly tight criteria in terms of which technologies could be brought in and demonstrated or piloted.
In terms of funding and the model that we use, I think it's very important that we're an arm's-length entity, and we do pick winners. That's our job. We're a policy instrument of the government. We operate within a very well-defined environment. Within that, we only fund the best technologies that we find.
So we think it's important that this kind of following the private sector money and matching it...but also being able to intelligently determine which technologies get funded and which ones don't is critical.