Thank you very much for the questions.
I guess I'll start by pointing out that the 10,000 megawatts in the context that I mentioned is not actually the CanWEA target; it is provincial government targets added together. Is that achievable? Yes. In fact, provincial governments already have a high degree of confidence that it's achievable, which is why they've set that out.
Canada has an outstanding wind resource. We have the world's longest coastline and second largest land mass. We have better wind resources than probably any other country except Russia. We have studies that show, for example, that in the province of Quebec, within 15 kilometres of existing transmission lines, you have over 100,000 megawatts of wind energy potential.
So it's not a shortage-of-resource issue. The issue really becomes an issue of integration and how you can best integrate that power. Canada again is fortunate in that we get 60% of our electricity from hydro, which is a very good match for wind energy in terms of facilitating integration.
Can we easily move beyond 4% to 10%? Yes, I think so. Can we move up to 20%, where Denmark is? Over time, I imagine, yes. I should point out that the Danish government and the main Danish electric utility have now commissioned a study to look at how they can move Denmark to 50% wind penetration. That work is going to be producing results in the next year or so.
I can't give you an exact number, but I can tell you that we believe 20% is a reasonable goal to work towards over time.