It's going to be used for a variety. It will be used for that. It will be used for transport. You really want it to be used for everything.
The other thing I would say is that by having the investment, we're seeing new longer-duration batteries. All of a sudden, there's an economic use for them. They're dragging in investment.
One of the things we've been working on is getting production early and offering it up as a working laboratory. We can have 50 or 100 times the impact. Forget about the region here. If you learn it and you're smarter, you can spread those learnings across the world. CO2 doesn't have borders. It just doesn't. One of the things we are working on is a working laboratory.
The hardest thing in clean tech is proving commercialization. I'd say it's across the board, and that includes green steel. Canada is blessed with some of the highest-grade iron and ore on the planet, and I can tell you now that people are figuring that out and saying, “Gee, we'd like to bring that industry here.”
Anything we can do to show that Canada is supportive, moving quickly and making things happen will bring money that will help universities, health care and the whole economy, as well as helping decarbonize. We have a once-in-a-generation opportunity here. We should grab it.