Thank you, Chair.
Good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for your individual presentations. They're very informative.
When we think about the energy and electricity sector, traditionally, three things come to mind. You have your generation, your transmission and your distribution. We can now add a fourth pillar, which is storage.
When we look at the Canadian market—and I'll focus on Ontario, which is my home province—and the dynamics going on, it's very fascinating. I'll give a shout-out to the Independent Electricity System Operator because it has a great website to look at in terms of how power is produced, the supply of it and then the demand. Looking at the IESO website, we see the important role that nuclear, wind, hydro, solar, gas and biofuel play in Ontario, with nuclear obviously being a very significant and stable baseload generator.
On that tangent, George and I have interacted on many occasions. I had the pleasure of visiting the Bruce Power plants last summer in Kincardine and just recently I was out to the OPG refurbishments in Darlington. There's some fascinating stuff going on.
George, the question I have is in terms of the supply chain and looking at the continuum. How is Canada uniquely positioned within the nuclear industry, both at home and globally?