Sure. Let me do that by giving you an example that already exists in the Canadian development space.
The project that I was talking about, INFRONT, which stands for Impact Investing in Frontier Markets, is a Canadian-funded project that provides incentive to the private investors to make their investments.
The incentives are in three forms. The first incentive is that it takes the first loss. This is Canadian government money. If there are private investors in these investments overseas, if there is a loss, the Canadian government takes the first loss. The second incentive is that it doesn't take any upside on its investment. You guys talked about how much is the right amount of return. On this particular one, it's zero return. That's probably too little, but it's another example of why other private investors, to the tune of $260 million, were willing to come into this investment fund.
The investment fund was sold about four years ago. The industry resounded with a lot of private capital. We're trying to do the same thing with the current fund, in which there is no Canadian government support or there is no Canadian government de-risking facility. In that fund, we're having a very difficult time selling to private investors because private investors are, frankly, afraid of investing in these frontier markets. That is an example where, when Canada did de-risk, private capital flowed in. When Canada didn't help to de-risk, it was much harder to raise private capital.