Thank you for the question.
We have provided a map as part of our submission that gets into where individual electricity companies are impacted. The primary areas are in Nova Scotia, as Derek outlined, but also in Alberta and in parts of British Columbia. It depends on what that is. As an example, it wouldn't impact Crown corporations like Ontario Power Generation, which has the most advanced small modular reactor program, but in the future others that may consider building one would be impacted by regulations.
To the point on the OECD, that is a good process. It is the kind of thing that Canada should be pursuing, but what has happened is that, in a very broad net, we're getting caught as bycatch. There's an unintended consequence, which will have an impact on individual Canadians in some provinces when it comes to their bills.
Just as our counterparts in the United States, the United Kingdom and Ireland have found, we think it makes the most sense from an affordability perspective to carve out regulated utilities for the reasons I outlined. Namely, they are already very regulated. Dollars are affirmed by a local regulator and spent in Canada, and there is that public interest element when it comes to energy affordability.