Thanks for the question.
We are in fact working across the country. We've done technical analyses and studies over the course of the last several years to identify the most promising projects that we think can help with emissions reductions and also keeping rates affordable for Canadians.
As I mentioned with the Atlantic, we have work under way with Saskatchewan and Manitoba right now to advance a project known as the Prairie Link, so essentially some grid integration between the two provinces that would allow surplus clean power from Manitoba to flow into Saskatchewan to help with retiring some of the coal. We're doing the same thing in British Columbia. We have a dialogue under way with BC Hydro, the province and the Canada Infrastructure Bank to look at how we can build some grid connections that would help connect natural gas facilities in the northeastern part of the province, which would help it use electric drives instead of gas drives to lower its emissions.
We are in fact looking across the country and trying to work with any of those provincial jurisdictions and utilities that want to work with the federal government. Certainly, electricity is a provincial domain, so we have to be working in lockstep with those jurisdictions.