Thank you for the question. It is a good question.
I have read before that Canada has agreed at a national level that it would have to double or triple its capacity, as a rule of thumb. This is not only for hydrogen, but in general for electrification.
Hydrogen actually provides an avenue to enhance the grid, if you will, in the sense that hydrogen can be produced when the peak needs of electricity consumption are not there. In those times when you need less, you can store hydrogen. Hydrogen is one of the few mediums that you can store at the terawatt level for a long period of time. Fortunately, in Canada we have a blessed geography that allows us to store hydrogen in depleted natural gas caverns and salt caverns. That's not only in Ontario, but in different provinces as well.
For example, you can extend the life and the size of projects in the solar and wind space, but allow them to produce hydrogen when the grid is not in a position to absorb all that electricity, and then use it when needed. At the same time, transmission lines can be a bottleneck, if you will, when it comes to bringing more renewable wind and solar energy on board. Hydrogen provides that avenue as well.
Depending on the different provinces in Canada, we need to understand how and when in the 24-hour period it is more optimal to produce hydrogen.