It's really quite simple. Alberta sits on about 300 years of a very low-cost, very low-sulfur, strong coal resource that we've been using in this province since the 1950s—in fact, the plant we're decommissioning tomorrow is over 50 years old. That has created a strong advantage in terms of energy costs for this province.
If CCS can be made to be commercial, that resource is developable, economic, and sustainable for the next 300 years. If it isn't, then the province will have to move to higher-cost forms of electricity, including large-scale hydro and what one of your speakers talked earlier about, such things as nuclear.
It's in our corporate best interests to extend the lives of the efficient coal plants that we have today and continue to provide a low-cost form of electricity in Alberta. It's in the province's best interests to find ways to sequester CO2 from the coal plants as its contribution toward CO2 reductions as we go forward and develop the vast energy resources of the province.