Thank you.
All I can do is tell you about my experience when I lived in Austria for a number of years in the early 1990s.
I was a beginner in solar energy. There was already an environmental awareness at that time which still doesn't exist here, even in 2006. There was already talk of setting national objectives in Austria. The Germans fell in step a few years later; they were behind, but they've caught up today.
As I told you, the reason this works there is that government support is stable. They've set objectives; they've talked about 10,000 megawatts of wind energy, 10,000 thermal or electric megawatts of solar energy before a given year. We should set objectives like those for all the right reasons, which are not the same as theirs, decide to go ahead with something stable, regardless of the government in power, and if we change governments along the way, we must at least retain what we already have during the transition. I think that's the recipe for success. That's what has developed over there.
Today, as an industrialist, I import collectors from Germany. Why couldn't I build them here? We've even discussed that with our German partners. It's because there's no market here right now. So I'm better off operating on a small scale, importing by ship and by air, rather than building a plant in Canada. The market is still too unsteady here. However, the Europeans acknowledge that we could easily do better than them, given our climatic conditions.
We just need to set objectives and maintain stability. Those are the two winning formulas.