I'll start with the first two and then I'll let my colleagues take the first crack at the third one.
Ramea Island is a remote community in Newfoundland that was completely powered by diesel generation sets. Six wind turbines have been installed there by a company called Frontier Power Systems. As I noted earlier, those turbines have now produced enough electricity to offset about 15% of the diesel fuel usage. There is discussion now about expanding that project and actually bringing more wind turbines on-site in Ramea.
There's also been some analysis done in Newfoundland of applying that concept, done essentially as a pilot project, across remote communities throughout Newfoundland. So that work is being looked at by Newfoundland and Labrador Hydro at this point in time.
You're right that there are 0.4 megawatts, and those in fact are from the Ramea project in Newfoundland. But Newfoundland and Labrador Hydro have recently signed two power purchase agreements for two wind projects that total 51 megawatts. Those will be built on the island.
One of the challenges in Newfoundland with wind development is not the wind resource—you probably have winds in Newfoundland like nowhere else—but the very small, isolated grid on the island of Newfoundland. Therefore, in managing the variability of wind you have fewer options, and it takes time to assess the best way to do that.
Where there is some tremendous additional potential, of course, is in Labrador . There have been proposals made by some private sector organizations for projects as large as 1,000 megawatts of wind energy development in Labrador, tying into existing transmission infrastructure around Churchill—