My life is the Ontario feed-in tariff right now. Because of the way energy jurisdiction is done, it would be great if there were a national policy, but realistically I doubt that would happen. Gordon is agreeing with me.
That being said, I think to support or shine a light on successive projects, etc., is where the federal government can play. Certainly if buildings are built or there are retrofits, etc., where the combination of a feed-in tariff and federal government involvement—I think we are going to see a huge uptake in Ontario because of the combination of programs where the departments have a very good relationship together and are looking at various programs, including the feed-in tariff, to see if it will work and what it will do.
If the federal government can do some things to even push that along, then that helps a great deal. In addition, some tax issues may affect residential uptake. The CRA has apparently declared that anybody who is gaining money from the grid becomes a business, which may be a problem. It could be a disincentive. We're looking at it. Certainly, the Ontario government is looking at it, but there is some concern about that being a disincentive.