Even if there's a national price for carbon, for example, if you install a wind turbine in Quebec, where you're competing against hydroelectricity and there's not a lot of carbon associated with that electricity, the electricity that you're offsetting has different rates of carbon associated with it. I guess it can end up favouring investment in certain areas and not other areas.
While the price of carbon is definitely important, I don't think it's necessarily the only mechanism we would need to have in place if we want to make sure that we have widespread development and development that's equal across the country. I think it's definitely key and it's definitely important to drive a lot of this development.
But at the same time, we are going to need complementary policies in jurisdictions, for example, in Quebec or British Columbia, that have large hydro bases that wouldn't necessarily be able to take advantage of a carbon price specifically for wind energy development. It's an answer that's specifically for wind energy development and not for tackling climate change as a whole.