Thank you for that question.
I would echo the commentary about the importance of the regional tables for those discussions. Every province is going to have different needs when it comes to decarbonization, specifically decarbonization of the grid.
I mentioned earlier that we do see opportunities from coast to coast to coast, but we also think and understand that the need to decarbonize the grid, let's say in Saskatchewan, is going to be different from the infrastructure needs to meet growing demand in Ontario. We think that, overall, the work that we can see coming out of these regional tables is going to be critical, and it is going to be what, hopefully, sets the strategy for what's needed in the individual provinces.
We also urge the government to launch the pan-Canadian grid council that was promised in the 2021 platform. We expect that bringing together experts from all across the country, experts from across industry, academia, indigenous communities, provinces and municipalities to talk about what these priorities should be in order to develop a grid strategy or a grid modernization strategy will be very critical.
Right now there are a lot of conversations going on, but they're happening in a lot of different rooms. Having a pan-Canadian grid council that can speak holistically about everything we need to do to bring the country together on this heavy lift will be critical as we get closer and closer to 2035, and the best time to start that is now. We'd like to see that launched to start discussing the strategy in earnest.