I happen to be the special adviser to the Canadian Nuclear Laboratories, as well as to the Ultra Safe Nuclear Corporation, which is working on the smaller, five-megawatt SMRs. I'm also a member of the national advisory council on SMRs.
Without a doubt, of the 177 indigenous communities that are currently diesel-dependent in this country, there are a number of those communities, like Iqaluit, for which an SMR could be a solution. Hydro, solar, wind and geothermal may be options, depending on the geography. Iqaluit is currently looking at hydro, but we're also doing an SMR feasibility study for Iqaluit, as well as for the Kivalliq region. It can provide the full base power solution, whereas solar and wind right now are only capable of offsetting a small amount.
It is also possible to integrate SMRs with other energy solutions like hydro and/or solar, especially since you want to have some backup when the SMRs have to go down for some maintenance. It's definitely something that both the NRC and the Canadian Nuclear Laboratories are absolutely reviewing as solutions for northern, indigenous and remote Canada.