There are a couple of points. First of all, the system is designed to be as durable and flexible as possible. It's designed so that it can be applied anywhere in Canada. Also, as your colleague aptly pointed out, it's conceivable that there will be changes in provincial policies in the short term, and therefore that the backstop might be needed in more than those limited jurisdictions you talked about.
Second, we have actually done significant detailed analysis in conjunction with each of the three territories, and we've shared those studies with the three territories. We did that for the territories, so the analysis is the property of the territorial governments. One of those governments has publicly shared that analysis. The others, I can't speak for. They're using it, but I can't speak for their intention. We have done detailed work with those jurisdictions.