Your point is well taken. Specifically in the Mackenzie Delta, there's an awful lot of gas, and the community of Inuvik is out of gas, which is kind of ironic because they're sitting right there next to a huge gas field. The problem, of course, is it's a very small rate base, a very small community, and to build pipelines and to drill the wells to supply those pipelines is a pricey proposition for a very small population. However, again, the gas is there. The two wells that they did build are watered out. They have a distribution system already in place. Those LNG trucks I showed you are going to be feeding the same gas distribution system with LNG, even though you don't normally think of trucks as being cheaper than pipeline transportation, at least in the short run, because of the prohibitive cost of that pipeline transportation.
It's a chicken-or-egg thing. We have a north with a very small population, highly dependent at this point, as you point out, on diesel-fired generation and the opportunity to use natural gas, but the link there is expensive. Yes, government and private sector cooperation...but who's actually going to pay for it? The answer to that, again, could well be the mining industry in Yukon. Most of the rest of the mines will be off the grid in Yukon. They will have to provide their own power generation. It may be that a pipeline south from the delta to Yukon could make sense once enough of a requirement was in place. I wouldn't see gas pipelines going to every mine or every community, but they could be going to a central LNG facility, for example, where you could liquefy the natural gas and then truck it out to the smaller requirements, be they resource developments or communities.