Thank you very much for the question. Alberta is a leader in wind energy. Pincher Creek is home of some of the first large-scale wind farms, and they've been very successful.
On the question with respect to integrating wind, one of the things we benefited from in the last five years is seeing what happens when you bring a bunch of wind into various systems, be they hydro or thermal. One of the things the utilities have realized is that while a single turbine's output may vary over the course of a day, if you're on a system that's big enough, and it doesn't have to be that...if it's a few hundred kilometres away and you have a second turbine, its output will often be different from the output of the first turbine. Then if you get a hundred turbines or a thousand turbines, what you find is that they tend to balance each other out extremely well. In fact, a lot of utilities with a lot of wind on their grids find that the variability of the fleet of turbines across their jurisdiction actually varies less than the demand they get.