The challenge with that is that there is provincial sales tax with respect to the commercial use of electricity. In terms of the incentives....
The reason I've emphasized it in Alberta is that there's no provincial.... All provinces have some form of provincial tax. For some it's through HST, some QST, and for some a provincial sales tax. Alberta is the example where you're seeing a challenge with this piece of legislation.
Here's the reason I know it's wrong. When we harmonized in 2010—Ontario joined the HST system and Quebec's system followed afterwards—the mutual fund industry said they were going to pick up from Ontario and move to Alberta. Rules were specifically introduced, called the selected listed financial institutions rules. They were heavily modified in order to ensure there wasn't a competitive advantage.
However, I have a piece of legislation related to a highly mobile industry—computer servers with electricity, selling that computing power through high-speed Internet to non-residents of Canada—that can easily pick up and move.
On the legislation, my biggest challenge in dealing with the Finance officials is when I've said, here's the fact pattern; tell me what I'm missing. I can identify who the recipient of the supply is. You keep telling everyone you can't identify them. I can tell you exactly who the counterparty is. Why are you bringing them into this legislation? The answer I've received so far is, I don't really agree with it, but I can't express why.