As I said, these are obviously the people in need. These are obviously the Canadians who are not going to do the retrofits on their own unless they receive some help. They're highly vulnerable to energy price increases that are happening because of global factors and because of the carbon price. I think it's a major policy gap that we really need to fill.
Some of the big benefits are health benefits. People who are not heating properly get issues with mould and issues from living in colder temperatures. A huge opportunity and often a huge benefit of upgrading low-income homes are the health benefits and the ability for seniors to live at home longer. Those are some of the non-energy benefits we get out of that.
The other thing I might mention is that some of the technologies I talked about are really relevant to low income. For instance, insulating from the outside instead of the inside allows tenants to stay in the building while the retrofit's being done, which is key.
In dealing with inflation, there are opportunities in a low-income program that don't exist in other programs to coordinate a whole bunch of buildings together—