Thank you very much, Madam Chair.
I appreciate that the cleanliness of Canada's grid has come up a number of times in the opening comments. My understanding is that our grid is about 85% clean, and as we move to get past coal right around the country to get to a 100% clean grid, that just gives us an even further competitive advantage when we're dealing with things nationally and internationally.
Obviously I'm going to build on where Mr. Baldinelli was, which is that the phase-out of coal in the province of Ontario, the province that he and I share, has been instrumental, as well as the accentuation of nuclear energy in Ontario.
Mr. Gorman, it is good to see you again. I wanted to ask you about the piece in the fall economic statement that talks about nuclear power and, as you mentioned, the investment tax credit being available for small modular reactors. Then there is a later piece that talks about how the eligibility is going to be consulted on with respect to large-scale nuclear power.
Can you comment, given that sort of division you talked about with the public and private components in Canada, about large-scale nuclear reactors and where you see CANDU fitting into the tax credit regime that needs to be happening as fast as possible? What is the role for large-scale CANDU reactors in that sphere?
Over to you, Mr. Gorman.