Exactly. It's a case where size matters. Having a geographic diversity is important, and certainly Alberta has a remarkable wind resource. There are currently plans to build 3,200 megawatts of transmission in the south. Part of that is based on the understanding that this will give them that diversity they need to balance with thermal.
Alberta is an interesting case as Canada's only deregulated electricity market. And just to answer your question about cost, Alberta is the only province right now that has essentially carbon pricing. The cost differential right now between wind and conventional technologies is fairly small. The general feeling is that once a carbon-pricing mechanism comes into place, it will basically reduce that gap to zero. Minister Prentice indicated earlier that there was an interest in having Canada follow the U.S. on a carbon pricing mechanism. Once we get to that point, that gap will close. From now until then, we do still have that gap, essentially to deal with the external cost of carbon emissions.