Of course, hydro power is green power. It's renewable as long as we have water flowing. Where I come from, British Columbia, we have elevation. It seems to me as long as we have elevation and water....
We still have significant rainfall on the coast. On the west coast, we get about 10 feet of rainfall a year in Tofino. So we have elevation, we have opportunities for even micro hydro projects. It seems to me this is something that's very green, sustainable, and renewable; even with changes we're still going to have a lot of rainfall.
So we have green power there. We gave you an example, I think a Manitoba example there, of a delay. I guess the point would be that if you have a delay, how does unwieldy, lengthy, duplicative process impact the development of projects? What happens to people if you have a project for which you're anticipating a one-year review process and it takes much longer? How does that impact the employment of people both in the construction and hydro side, people who are waiting to move ahead?