That takes excess electricity, creates hydrogen from water, puts it into the gas pipeline and delivers a lower emissions molecule to the residents of Markham. There's also one in Fort Saskatchewan and there are a series of projects planned across Canada.
Similarly, we talked about methane earlier. Agricultural methane is a large source of emissions in Canada. We are capturing methane from landfills and waste water treatment plants and converting that renewable methane into a product we put into our pipelines, which again reduces the emissions profile of the product that we deliver. Those are two examples of cleaner fuels that can flow through that infrastructure system.
I would encourage anyone in the energy policy space to think about the electric system 50 years ago in many countries around the world, such as the United States and Canada. It was very, very dependent on coal. Fifty years later, we are very dependent on natural gas and renewables. We didn't cut the wires back then because they were coal wires; we cleaned them up, and I encourage you to think about cleaning up the gas system further.