Yes, absolutely.
I'll start with the climate crisis. What we're seeing around the globe and here in Canada—I've experienced it both in Toronto and in British Columbia—is around extreme events and weather hazards due to climate change. This could be extreme heat events requiring a lot of air conditioning. This could be events in which the grid infrastructure is overheated, which means, basically, that people are not getting the electricity they need when they need it.
In order to address this, what we really need to be thinking about is having more resilient grids, allowing and encouraging people to be prosumers and having behind the meter every type of resilient option possible with microgrids.