Thank you very much.
I would just mention briefly that the department is investing in the future of Canada's capacity for wind technology through the technology road map we've just initiated with the industry and the environmental organizations involved in wind. In fact, the first meeting of the steering committee of that initiative was last week, in Alberta. It's being chaired by Dawn Farrell, president of TransAlta Wind. It involves the whole cross-section of the wind industry in Canada: the delivery agents and technology producers and the hydros that have to integrate their grids with the wind capacity.
What we're endeavouring to do with this initiative is identify where Canada has its strengths, where there may be technology gaps, and where there's economic development potential for Canadian companies to contribute. We also want to learn where there's international potential to collaborate with wind leaders in other countries and to build on their research and development. This is a very focused technology road map that will be completed early next year. It will lead to an identification of all the technology development that can be done in the wind area as well as to potential policy and regulatory barriers that will need to be addressed.
It follows quite a bit the model for carbon dioxide capture and storage, the subject of one of our technology road maps a year and a half ago. It led to a CCS task force that identified policy and regulatory measures that needed to be developed. That, in turn, led to the investment in CCS in the last budget.
On the solar front....