On the Drake Landing solar neighbourhood, for example, that was the largest procurement in Canadian history of solar thermal panels: 800. And the firm that we purchased from was EnerWorks. They're based in and manufacture out of Ontario.
Of some of the challenges that we had on that project, there was quite a bit of European technology that we had to depend on, not the least of which was glycol. There was not a North American manufacturer for the glycol required for the system that met the spec. But as a result of doing this—EnerWorks, the solar panel manufacturers, the evolution of technology, the learning, the demonstration—how critical it is to have those research development dollars to move to the next step.
I can tell you, I met with our project facilitator on Drake for lunch today, and there are projects of this design and much broader scale being proposed in western Canada, in Ontario, in the Maritimes. It's moving forward, but you have to have those demonstrations, you have to have those “learn from your mistakes”, both from manufacturing and from installation. We now have home builders where R-2000 has become the norm because they now understand the technology and the procedures, and it makes sense, and the marketplace is asking for it.