The other point, too, is that one thing we know about technology innovation is that, if you had asked someone 20 years ago what it would cost to have a laptop or a smart phone, they would have said thousands and thousands of dollars based on the current technology. Part of what we'll do with things like an economic incentive for carbon pricing is drive down the costs of technology. It's the reason why the costs of wind and solar have gone down 80% in the last eight years, and you've seen a similar decline in the cost of electric car batteries. Pricing plus other incentive measures are driving down the costs, which are actually reducing the costs of transitioning to a low-carbon economy. In most parts of the world, many parts, it's actually cheaper to produce energy through wind and solar now than it is through coal.
Your point about storage is a valid one. We're going to have to make that same kind of breakthrough on energy storage for that to be a sustainable baseload, but there are lots of really bright people working on doing that, and whoever cracks that one is going to make a lot of money. Let's make it here in Canada. We've got some players who are in the game on that one.