Up or down, but generally if B.C. is going to do something, they may go up. Generally the provinces will go up slightly. The national code is adopted with a lot of consultation with the provinces. What we aim to do when we're developing the national codes is to make sure that the provinces are on board. One of the recommendations that came back from the provinces was,“Look, some provinces are well ahead of us on the energy front. Some of them are right on par with the national code, and we're actually behind in some cases.”
In order to alleviate those provinces so that we're not just coming at them and saying, “In 2022, you're going to have a net-zero ready building, so you have to go from this point to that point”, the agreement amongst the provinces and through the consultation with the commission was that we would develop tiers—tier 1, tier 2, tier 3, tier 4. Each one of those tiers would be a progressive increase. The province would come in and say, “Okay we're ready to jump to tier 2 right now, and then in about three or four years we can jump to tier 3, tier 4”, with the objective of reaching a 2030 mandate of net-zero. In working with them, we realize that this is probably going to be the best approach. We may not have consistency upfront, but the end goal will be the same. Everybody will jump the same way. Some provinces currently are ahead of the national system. Some provinces are using the national system, and then there are some provinces that haven't yet adopted it at the national level. It varies across the country, but we're hoping with this new approach we are going to have more consistency as we go forward.