Yes.
First, when you want to deploy wind energy, not just in a remote community but in any community, you need to take into consideration how it integrates with other sources. In a remote community you want to ensure that you're looking first at energy efficiency opportunities, reducing energy demand and then using wind and other sources to meet that demand. We have a very successful wind-diesel project currently under way in the community of Ramea Island in Newfoundland, which has taken six turbines and has offset, I believe, about 12% or 15% of the diesel fuel at this point.
With respect to your final request, I will share with the committee a detailed proposal that we have prepared, called the “Remote Community Wind Incentive Program”, and I will subsequently send it to the clerk. This proposal recognizes that there are differences in remote communities, so it has a stream that's targeted to large industrial installations like a mine in the north and a larger remote community and also more isolated remote communities as well. The program is designed a little differently in each of those cases to reflect that, but I will very happily share that with the committee.