Yes. That's what happens right now, in fact. Under the current act, which is $75 million, the insurance consortium that Mr. Elston referred to has finally, over time, insured that whole amount.
But that wasn't true originally. Originally the private consortium insured about half of it, and the Government of Canada, more or less through a re-insurance agreement, insured the rest. In many parts of the world an amount is made available by a combination of insurance pools and states, i.e., nations committing to put a certain amount on the table in order to arrive at these totals. They do that presumably as a function of the policy decision to expedite using nuclear power generation.