It depends, Mr. Cormier, on the type of facility, but the time is getting very tight to achieve that by 2030.
I'll expand on that from a Nova Scotia perspective. How we're replacing coal-fired generation in Nova Scotia is primarily through onshore wind. We'll be adding another thousand megawatts—perhaps a little more—of onshore wind, and the province will procure that through various tranches between now and 2029.
If you're looking at wind farms, I believe there is sufficient time to enable that transition to happen by 2030. We're also installing grid-scale batteries on the system to allow for a greater penetration of wind. We're actively in construction of those projects now.
If you want to start to build a new hydro facility, there is not enough time to get that done. I heard Mr. Bennett talk about the fact that he'd get a nuclear plant approved more quickly than a hydro facility, so getting a hydro facility approved before 2030.... I don't even think you'd get it approved, let alone built.