It's not something we've costed out. It's my feeling that this would reduce redundancies that we have right now.
Right now, we have 13 systems duplicating themselves across the country, without help on some of the fundamentals. It would make each of those more efficient. It might reduce their costs at the provincial level. Federally, we have a federal system in place; it's a matter of coordination to make it a national system.
We could also benefit from a national system because the Americans have something called the Cooperative Institute for Research to Operations in Hydrology. They put, in Canadian dollars, $489 million over five years into this. They're drawing heavily upon the Canadian models that we developed in Global Water Futures, which aren't in operation in Canada yet but are going to be in the United States, including for all our shared river basins.
If we have a system that could take advantage of what's being developed on the continent, then we can apply things very efficiently, I think.