Yes, certainly, and thank you for the question. I think it's an interesting one. What have we not thought about?
What I would add is that instead of simply thinking about one-off investment decisions, this isn't a matter of whether a single investment will be made in Canada or the United States. These have knock-on, long-term effects, and I think back to the late 1960s and throughout the 1970s into the 1980s and 1990s when we built an ecosystem in Canada to support our CANDU nuclear system. That ecosystem, in fact, included hundreds of different companies, products, services and so on. We should be thinking in terms of the same sort of future. Are we going to be building the ecosystems over the longer term here in Canada to support that energy transition for those new technologies?
It isn't simply a matter of whether a particular project is going to the United States or Canada, but are we, over the longer term, going to build an ecosystem equivalent to what we did with CANDU for hydrogen, small modular reactors, carbon capture, wind or storage?