Sure. In cases of nuclear power facilities or hydroelectric facilities, you're talking about a decade of investment leading up to your project, but a lot of projects aren't that size. A lot of the projects simply aren't as large as these large provincially led investments. To ask a housing developer or some other developer to front those costs five, six, or seven years before their development goes in the ground is a difficult proposition, simply because, under the habitat banking today, you make your investment and then you have to establish the credit system following the investment.
Really, what you're doing is monitoring the habitat for a few years in advance to ensure that the credits are viable and the productivity gains are there. Then you're able to make that transaction afterwards. A lot of other project proponents simply don't have that sort of lead time on their projects.