Thank you, Mr. Chair.
We don't have a lot of time today to ask questions, but I would like to ask you if you could provide us with some information.
Ms. Wörlen, you had talked about power rates a little bit earlier. I'm wondering if it's possible for you to send the chair your rates for the different energy sources you've talked about this morning. There were a number of them—hydro, wind, biomass, photovoltaic, geothermal, and solar thermal. I'm wondering if we can get that, and some information on how your rates vary from business to residential, and baseload to peak and those kinds of things. If it would be possible for both of the presenters to do that for us, we could get an idea of how we can compare those rates, and then compare them to what's happening in our country right now.
I'd like to talk a little more specifically about these feed-in tariff rates. I think the other committee members are getting sick of me talking about the monopoly utility provider in my local province, but the reality is that it has not been very cooperative in terms of giving people alternatives for energy provision. So I'd like to know at what height those feed-in tariff rates have had to be applied in order to encourage development.
Then, Ms. Wörlen, you talked about how they have been decreasing gradually. I'd like to know where they are right now and at what point you think they won't be a factor anymore. Have you reached that point in your country?
I'd also be interested in having our Swedish guests speak to that as well.