TransAlta is not participating in pilot projects on the nuclear side. The nuclear power industry uses a very specific set of skills and attributes, and it is not something that TransAlta would have experience in. If you look at how our company approaches CO2, we approach it relative, first of all, to CCS with coal, which we talked about today with Project Pioneer; second, we have a thousand megawatts of wind generation across the provinces here in Canada, so we develop wind farms; third, we have, as you've mentioned, hydro-electric—about 800 megawatts—and are looking at additional hydro-electric here in Alberta; and then we invest as well in geothermal electricity in California, where we generate electricity from heat under the ground.
So at TransAlta, we believe fundamentally that if you look out the next 50 years and are thinking about CO2 and energy use, you need to have projects in all areas. We believe that fundamentally you need to be able to draw on all energy resources, which is why we are focusing on all of those. But our company would not participate in nuclear at this time.