We are blessed with one of the largest uranium supplies in the world, and it's a great national asset for us. We can look to it to provide us with security of supply for many years to come. At the same time, to the extent that the global demand for uranium grows as quickly as many forecast it will, it's certainly possible that uranium will come to be in shorter supply. That, of course, will be wonderful news for the Saskatchewan uranium industry, because their prices will likely go up.
At the same time, we at Atomic Energy feel that our technology should be flexible and should accommodate a number of different scenarios of future fuel supply. One of the great strengths, frankly, of the CANDU design is that it has fuel flexibility to burn alternative fissile elements, such as thorium, or to burn recovered uranium, so that we're part of lessening the creation of nuclear wastes and of creating more economic power generation using CANDU. We're certainly part of the program that will in effect keep our options open and will be able to take full advantage of the strengths we have in Canada in uranium, but also provide for the day when globally uranium is perhaps a scarcer commodity.