Thank you for that question.
We have a very strong supply chain. There's the fact that the refurbishment programs—let's just start there—of OPG and Bruce Power are on time and on budget. Some of those projects are actually ahead of schedule, and they went through a pandemic that way, just to stress that.
That is the foundational piece in the Canadian nuclear space that has really lit up the CANDU supply chain. This is a foundational piece for the SMR opportunities, the small modular reactor opportunities, as well. That skilled labour, that capability, that knowledge is foundational, and it has global attention. At some of those international meetings we've attended, other countries want to know how Canada did it. How does OPG do it? How does Bruce Power do it? They want to know explicitly about the refurbishment projects, for example. I think that's the foundational piece: the interest again in CANDU so countries like Romania feel confident things can be delivered.
With this moving forward, I think just the reinforcement of the role of nuclear in a consistent way—whether it's green bond definitions, ITCs that mirror up with the U.S. or the inclusion at COP, for example, of an explicit statement that nuclear is part of the menu of clean energy technologies, a menu that makes sense for different jurisdictions to assemble their technologies—is key.