Since I don't have too much to add to that, I will address the feed-in tariff directly.
Feed-in tariffs are fantastic if applied properly. The lesson that I always look at is Germany in the anaerobic digestion market. They put in a feed-in tariff at a very high price, 22 euro-cents to 27 euro-cents per kilowatt-hour. That's ten times what people might be getting in Manitoba or Quebec for the price of power. Subsequently, over a very brief period of time, they now have well over 5,000 anaerobic digesters feeding electricity into their grid at any given time.
Ontario put in a feed-in tariff a couple of years back with some additional barriers that aren't related to the feed-in tariff. It works out to about 12 cents for anaerobic digestion, and they have one or two projects on the ground. Alberta put in a six cent per kilowatt-hour top-up to whatever is available on market, which essentially made a 13 cent or 14 cent feed-in tariff happen in Alberta. One or two projects were built during that time.
To make a feed-in tariff work, it has to be hefty but not overblown. It also has to be very long term so that investors realize that they can accept the lower utility-type returns because they're very low risk.