Yes, this is a project that has actually become a world leader in carbon sequestration technology, right here in Canada. It started up in 2015. It has now just exceeded its five-million-tonne mark of sequestering carbon dioxide in a deep aquifer underlying....
Most of Alberta actually has this access. The technology has proven itself brilliantly. It has been able to run at very high reliability. This is Canadian technology developed partly in Quebec that we've applied here.
With this proven technology platform, Shell believes this is something that we can now really build on across the country in many places where there are such strong capabilities to match emissions with the ability to sequester carbon safely in these deep formations.
Shell has made the technology open to everyone. As the weeks have gone by in this crisis, we've had people at the site from all over the world coming to see how it worked and learning from that.
As an opportunity for Canada, we think it's the really fundamental one to help us bridge and be part of this transition so that the emissions from existing facilities can be captured, be they petrochemical, oil and gas production or other emitters, or cement or other production. While we bridge to new energy sources, we're managing those emissions in real time, and this technology can be deployed quickly.