It is, but I think we're getting there in Ontario. And Ontario will be a perfect example for other provinces to consider this option, as a feed-in tariff, or an advanced renewable energy tariff, as it is referred to.
But I would suggest that I could ask the same question of what do you do when a nuclear plant in Ontario isn't ramped up quickly enough to meet the excess demand when we have a shortage or a peak demand in the summertime? Or what do we do when we have power plants that are shutting down in Ontario because of maintenance issues?
We put a lot of stock in central generation, but if you look at the home and you look at the on-site generation sources that could be available to it, and if we start looking at that as part of the energy mix as opposed to it being an add-on to the homeowner to benefit the homeowner only, it's not a benefit just for the homeowner; it's a benefit to society and to the energy paradigm that we're trying to pursue, which is a cleaner environmental energy source.
If you look at it in that context, then what we are truly doing is building a greener, more secure energy matrix.