Thank you for the question.
The reality is as you described it: the technology is not what I would quite call mature. There is ready technology available today that can be used and deployed in carbon capture and storage and in the pipelines, but it is not as mature or as well understood or as reliable and as inexpensive as it will be over time. The early stages of the project will use more expensive technology than the later stages probably will.
We have not put a formal ask in front of the federal government in terms of dollar amount. That's because we really believe we need to understand the policy framework that's in front of us in terms of the levels of emission reductions that are going to be put onto the various participants in the economy.
We don't have a specific ask in mind at this stage. We do know that working with the province and the federal government and industry, we can try to identify the size of reductions that we would like to achieve together through carbon capture and storage. Then we can determine what the costs of that will be, and then we can determine an appropriate sharing formula.
But it's more than just the financial aspect. It's also sharing the risk, really, in terms of the large-scale investments that would take place in what is right now an absence of a specific policy.