I'm not sure of the events that will occur over time, but that being said, the short answer is yes, we have a long-term plan for maintenance of all of our assets. The way that works is that we take all of the considerations that you mentioned, the possibilities of that, plus others, including the age of the assets, manufacturers' specifications, and our own reliability standards, which on the island is higher than in many jurisdictions in the rest of the country because we are isolated. We have a very strong group of planning engineers that takes all of that data and produces long-term plans, not only for transmission; we also have long-term maintenance plans for our thermal generating stations, our hydro generating stations, and our diesel plants. It's very well documented, and what drives our maintenance work every year is a long-term plan.
In addition to that, at Churchill Falls, the upper Churchill, these plants will last forever if you maintain them properly, and that's our responsibility. Apart from the fact that we are committed to operational excellence and we're committed to delivering power to our customers, including Hydro-Québec, in an effective fashion, that contract will be up at a point in time, and when that contract comes up, naturally the intention and our responsibility are that we have a 100%-operating facility that's going to go on for a long time after the contract is up. From a CFLCo perspective, they also do long-range planning to cover all those eventualities.