Yes.
Mr. Bradley, we often talk about the insanity of selling our oil on the cheap to the Americans in the west and buying it expensively from foreign sources in the east. Sometimes we ignore that we're doing the same with electricity in Canada. For example, in Ontario we're paying eight or nine cents a kilowatt hour on average, and in Quebec, right next door, they're selling hydro to the northeastern United States for two cents a kilowatt hour. Quebec hydro could make more money and Ontario could have lower energy prices if we actually traded more, although we do some interprovincial purchases from Quebec.
Is there a potential for a national corridor or electrical transmission or just better interprovincial trade in electricity that we could pursue as a country, and if so, what are the obstacles to making it happen?