I'll try to give a really quick answer focused on wind, because that's what the question is about.
I think Sean is right. If we do want to see manufacturing for the large-scale turbines, we need to have a long-term, stable market. These are huge machines that require huge investment. The only way we're going to convince people to set up large manufacturing is to have a long-term market.
I think one of the areas that Canada can play in, in terms of the small scale and the big scale and where these two interlink with each other, is this idea of control systems. It sort of cuts both ways. One disadvantage that we have in Canada is that we have electrical islands. Our provinces aren't very well interconnected to one another. Also, for a country this size, we have a fairly small load. If we seriously ramp up variable technologies like wind, we are going to get into control questions sooner than other jurisdictions like Europe would, because they're much better integrated.
If we decide to really ramp up renewables, that is an area where we can actually be ahead of the curve and export that know-how to the rest of the world. I think that goes for the small-scale systems and the remote-scale systems, as well as the large systems. That's maybe the Canadarm, I guess, that Canada can contribute to the worldwide global renewable energy development.