When we look at groundwater resources and regulations across Canada, they do differ in different components. The people who construct those wells have to be put place. Then there are ultimately the ones doing the work mechanically on the wells.
For geothermal—I'll use that as an example—in a lot of provinces and territories a well has to be constructed in a very specific and defined way in order to protect the resource, which is the public resource, and to protect the future of that resource. However, when we look at the regulation or the component of the people installing it for a specific use—for example, geothermal—there really isn't a lot of regulation around that geothermal component while it's being talked about and developed.
Again, I come back to this idea of national training or certification or understanding with regard to the use of geothermal, and then identifying that thermal load, the effect on the geology, and then potentially neighbours' wells if they are not using them for that thermal load. So I think there has to be a bigger discussion around how that's occurring and who is qualified to do that.