I think the key thing that could be really transformative is coordinating the demand on the supply side and having them work together better.
For instance, we need to not just retrofit every building at a time; we need to retrofit thousands, millions, of buildings. By aggregating a bunch of those buildings together, you all of a sudden have reshaped the nature of demand to open up a negotiation with manufacturers and other solution providers in your market to say, “If we can deliver all this demand, you can now have that certainty to change your manufacturing process, to perhaps manufacture certain types of products in Canada that aren't done now or to come up with solutions that nobody has thought about before to solve the problems we have.” Matching that supply and demand is really where we need to go.
Initiatives under what's called the greener neighbourhoods program and the retrofit accelerator initiative that have also been supported are starting to get there. Right now those are mostly at the pilot project stage, and they're quite restricted in terms of what kinds of buildings they are functioning. A larger scale, more flexible approach to really thinking about coordinating demand and supply could really help clean technology in the country.