Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Thanks to both of you for presenting this afternoon.
Mr. Elston, I represent a riding in Ontario, and those of us from Ontario and probably others around the table will know how well you served the province of Ontario with integrity and great skill for some years. So it's nice to have you present before us.
I want to talk a little bit about the perceived risk vis-à-vis nuclear. Whenever nuclear is mentioned, in some circles it conjures images of Chernobyl and Three Mile Island, and it seems to me that at least in North America there are communities and individuals who have been scarred by what happened elsewhere. I appreciate the data with respect to the safety records, which is laudable, but do you find in your presentations or in your discussions with citizens a concern about the safety of nuclear, people saying it's relatively inexpensive, it doesn't produce the greenhouse gas emissions that coal, for instance, surely does, but they really don't want to live within 50 miles of a nuclear reactor? Is that still out there, that type of view?