Sure. I'll take each point as they come.
On the short-run and long-run economic multipliers, the benefits of clean energy investment are that they can be quite job heavy in the short-term. In being job-heavy, as long as you're employing domestically skilled labour, you're able to keep a lot of that spending within the borders. In that way, not very much capital flows outside.
Additionally, if you have source materials locally available, such as the steel for your turbines or the solar cells in your panels, again that investment can be kept domestic. The opportunity to crowd in private investment is quite pertinent in the Canadian context because you're a little more developed along the clean energy curve than some other countries, similar to here in the U.K. A very small amount of investment can incentivize quite a big amount of private investment. There are just small hurdles left in making renewables competitive compared to other alternatives at the shoulder points in the day in terms of energy supply. They're already competitive during the middle of the day.
I'm seeing a red flag. I might have to stop there.
Sorry, Sherry.