Personally, I'm a big fan. It makes a lot of sense.
The challenge we have in New Brunswick is the way that NB Power has procured their renewable electricity. They've said they need 10% on the grid. So they did it by RFPs, requests for proposals. Basically, what we got was TransAlta out of Alberta and Suez Energy out of Spain, two very large companies with very deep pockets, who came in and said, well, we can produce power for 9.5¢; we have staff people who can access federal programs; we have endless access to capital.
So if we came in as a farm group and said, yes, we can put up a wind tower—a $3 million investment, fair enough—we would be competing against large companies who can under-bid us. We don't have access to the capital and the transportation they do.
When it comes down to renewable energy policy, if John's going to do it, he's going to put up a 10 kilowatt turbine, not a 3 megawatt unit. So that's where comprehensive policy becomes very important, because it is going to cost him 15¢ to do that. If he has to compete with Suez, it's not going to happen.