Is that something that could be broadened as part of your recommendation for a national electrification strategy, taking in not only those considerations but also those critical decisions that need to be made in terms of the grid, and when those have to be made? There are the transmission lines. You had talked about some of your recommendations. The government needs to allow support for government agencies—for example, the OPGs and our local municipal electric utilities—to be able to participate in programs. That's going to be critical. If everyone is going to have an electric car tomorrow, we don't have the capacity. All the transformers in our neighbourhoods would blow. Who's going to make those investment decisions to upgrade those transformers, not to mention getting that electricity to those homes? That all needs to be considered.
Again, there are the large projects. For example, as I said, with Pickering itself, if the decision is made to refurbish Pickering, that's 14% of the Ontario grid. If we take that out, how are we going to replace that? I come from Niagara Falls, where we have Sir Adam Beck I and II, but that's only 2,200 megawatts, with almost no more potential to expand the production there.
Those are the decisions that we need to make. Those are critically important. I was hoping you could elaborate on those decisions that the government expand; for example, is it green bonds that you're saying the government should allow large Ontario government operations and local municipalities to be able to draw into?