Absolutely.
Tax credits would help. Incentive programs like I talked about before would help, too, to reduce some of the upfront capital costs. Even the funding that's available to support [Technical difficulty—Editor] development skills within the organizations.
One of the things that we hear, especially with COVID, is that the support that we provide through our green economy hubs is incredibly valuable, in having that sort of touchstone and the availability of that knowledge, externally, to draw on. The ability to afford membership fees, even now in the COVID context, is quite difficult. Any kinds of incentives that actually allow those businesses to pay to access the kinds of supports—one example of which is what we provide—that actually help them figure out what to do would be really useful.
In funding envelopes, traditionally what's been there is that projects are funded looking at dollars per tonne reduced—what the return is that's going to be there. That metric doesn't really apply for a small business because you're not going to get the same sort of dollars per tonne reduced as a large organization would. However, in those projects, if part of what can be funded is actually eligible costs, that could be to go towards energy auditors or organizations that can help them understand what their footprint is and what to do next. That could really go a long way to fill that gap.