Thank you, Mr. Chair.
My riding is the home of the second-largest cluster of greenhouses in the world after the Netherlands, and it consumes a lot of natural gas today. When gas prices spiked to $14 a gigajoule over 15 years ago, we went back to bunker C, back to coal, etc. Fortunately, now it's come back to natural gas, the cleanest-burning alternative that's available to that sector.
Can you talk about natural gas's position structurally from a price perspective, looking at long-term investments in infrastructure relative to what could be coming down the road, such as hydrogen or things like that?