I absolutely think there is. I think it would be on the basis of what one might call “clean tech 2.0”, which is going to be about more distributed technology, or less centralized technology.
We're going to stop spending 20% of municipal budgets pumping clean and dirty water around. We're going to treat the water where it is, rather than moving it around, because doing that involves an awful of GHGs.
We're not going to build enormous transmission lines between very large grids. I'm talking about 200 megawatt grids. Microgrids will be in the order of 30 megawatts. These are very large grids.
We actually have engineering experience and expertise in this area, and we have technical experience. We also have the financing. So we can certainly turn the ship around, but I have to say we haven't taken the first-round opportunity. It's time for us to step up.
With regard to cities and states, sometimes the procurement is done by the city and the money comes from the state. So the money conversation is about whether it's Canada's turn, and that's a diplomatic discussion, not a commercial discussion.