The first step is the clean fuel standard, which, under its current development process, will implement a regulation on liquid fuels in 2022, and set a requirement to go out to 2030 to reduce the carbon intensity of the fuels used. In a regulatory design paper, which will be released before Christmas, the government will identify what percentage of that 30-million tonne total target is allocated to liquid fuels. The remainder will be to gaseous and solid fuels, and those regulations are to be implemented in 2023, a year later. That's the timeline for the build-out.
In terms of the timeline of the commercialization, or the production of these fuels in Canada, we already have, as I mentioned, an installed base. Most projects take about three to five years to permit, finance, construct and then commission. Most of the fuels in our capital project survey are likely to be moved into the market by 2025, so they will be available to be utilized within that regulatory timeline.