One of the things, obviously, that I think are important in undertaking this exercise is the fact that there are going to be a lot of Canada's electrical generating facilities turning over between the period of, say, 2012 and even later, into 2020. So I think the federal government needs to provide direction in terms of where it wants to go and make those kinds of decisions about, if we're giving assistance, where are we best placed to do that to ensure that we do have a sustainable energy supply.
One thing that was interesting, particularly from the presentation that was given from the Solar Industries Association, is that anything I've seen on renewable energy to this point places most of it on wind, and then a much smaller component on geothermal or on solar. In the presentation that was given on solar, if you add up the different components that are put there by the year 2025, you're looking at about 25,000 megawatts by 2025, which is a very big number. That represents 10% of Canada's supply now. I know you've broken it down a couple of other ways.
As it has been described by those advocating renewable energy before, the advantage of solar was for individual homes or for heaters for pools. What you're describing on the photovoltaics is 10,000 megawatts. The same number that wind is talking about in 2015, you're talking about 10 years later, when right now installed capacity in Ontario—which I realize is just Ontario—by 2012 would only be 40 megawatts. So how do we get there?
This is the first time I'm hearing that solar could provide that kind of number. Where is that coming from, or how would you get there?