The first priority was Alberta. The next one will be Nova Scotia, Ontario and New Brunswick. We're now organizing departments to define our requirements in each of those. We've done Alberta, so now we're going to go to the other jurisdictions—what are our requirements, our electricity needs in those departments—and then organize our RFP, or an RFI first, but likely just an RFI/RFP, go to the market and buy electricity, or we will work with the utility provider in that jurisdiction.
Every jurisdiction is different. The first thing is to understand requirements, go across departments and see how much we need, how much we can buy, and what the delta is so we don't always need to buy 100%, and then work with the partners—the province, the utilities and the industry in that jurisdiction—and define our strategy to go to market. Then we go and buy.
We're looking at 2025. We want to roll it out over the next year or two, so there's a few years for people to actually provide the electricity.
There are different ways you can do it. You can provide electricity on site on federal lands, if we have a lot of land. You can do a power purchase agreement where you buy it off—