The first thing we do is to assess all projects against the criteria you well articulated. Is it infrastructure that's in the public interest? Then we ask ourselves what that means. What that means, as we interpret it, is to ensure that despite the independence of our board, and a very rigorous and well-articulated investment and approval process, the investments we make will always have a policy alignment with the government.
We look at what those policies are, what policies have been articulated. We know for a fact that we are looking constantly at whether there is a greenhouse gas emissions reduction in many of the projects we look at, whether they be transit projects, renewable energy storage projects, transmission projects, moving interties to fossil fuel burning provinces from clean producing provinces. That's the kind of analysis we conduct.
We also look at contribution to economic activities, to long-term sustainable growth. It has to be value-added and sustainable in the longer term. It's not a question of digging holes here and filling them up there. It is really value-added infrastructure that is going to improve people's way of life. As in the example I gave you of broadband connectivity in the north, it has to enrich the education and livelihood of people living there. It's that sort of thing.