Actually, I was thinking about this slide in front of us. Our answer is that energy efficiency is energy efficiency, irrespective of whether the grid is cleaner or less clean.
Actually, one thing missing from the slide is incentivizing on-site production of energy through solar and other innovative things. That will obviously also help, particularly in a less clean grid, and we should have had that on the slide.
The last question you posed to us was on how we can further accelerate net-zero energy housing becoming market-feasible. We heard a lot of that from Mr. Hill. It was terrific.
Our industry represents commercially owned and professionally managed assets, a significant portion of which are multi-unit residential buildings, commonly called apartment buildings, so we don't look at the single family detached house that I and many Canadians live in. I think the others on the panel could probably help us there. We are increasingly in condominiums. Student residences are a huge, booming area too.
Frankly, it's the same message again: driving energy efficiency, driving building operations efficiency, and investing in the people who are running it, as well as investing in technologies and providing the right kinds of incentives. The one difference is that it's a much different relationship to engage with a residential tenant—my mother-in-law, who lives in an apartment in Toronto, for instance, or my grandmother in Winnipeg—than it is to engage with a commercial tenant, where there is a different kind of relationship.
I'm out of time. I'll put that slide up and leave it at that.
Thank you.