In much of the country the price of power is regulated, so we end up with situations where there's a very determined type of approach to telling what the price of the electricity is going to be. That determined approach is based on the mix of various forms of electricity production in the area. It's provincial here.
So if you go to Quebec, it's all hydro that you can build over a long period of time. You'll find that power rates are relatively low compared to the rest of the country. If you go to Newfoundland, where they have to pay a lot of money for their heat and hydro and they have a lot of oil plants and that kind of thing, power is quite expensive. So there are differences between power rates in different parts of the country, even where they're regulated.
In Alberta the rates are not regulated. Power rates there last year averaged something like 8.1ยข per kilowatt hour. That's almost an average for the country. There are places where it's lower and there are places where it's higher. But it depends on the mix of fuels and the mix of generation possibilities available.