Indeed. That question is kind of saying to pick your favourite child, so I don't know. We like all of our projects, but I'll tell you about two.
The first project the CIB invested in is the REM, the new transit line in Montreal. I mention this one only because it has many of the hallmarks I mentioned. It's a collaboration, obviously, across levels of government and with the private sector, including an institutional investor, in this case, the Caisse de dépôt. It's a project that is now partially in service. Two of the three lines are operating. People are riding the transit. It is delivering real benefits, so you can see the other side of it. It's transforming housing availability, commutability and livability in the city of Montreal in really meaningful ways. That is one which I continue to point at.
A more recent one would be our intertie project, which is a new transmission line between Nova Scotia and New Brunswick. The reason I would pick this one is that it has, again, all the hallmarks of a great project. The project is owned, actually, by a consortium, including the power utility, Nova Scotia Power and the CIB as an equity investor. The Mi’kmaq first nations of both Nova Scotia and New Brunswick are also owners of the project.
Together, from the start, they're designing where the line will go and how it will get built, creating jobs, economic development and, eventually, ownership of the line. All of the indigenous communities of both Nova Scotia and New Brunswick are going to own this line alongside us. It's going to connect the grids, create more reliability, allow us to grow electricity supply and move towards decarbonizing the energy supply in both Nova Scotia and New Brunswick.
Those are two.
