Yes, that's in fact precisely where we're at with QUEST as we talk to the provinces and hear about the kind of growing interest in provincial QUESTs. Everybody's saying the real needs are to start deploying these things in real projects to show what they can do, to get the metrics and the measurement down, to prove out the reductions in cost and energy that come along with it, and to share the information.
British Columbia does have a bit of a lead in some aspects of this, but when I went out there a few weeks ago, all they want is more information. They're looking for it from across the country. Everybody wants case studies. Everybody wants a central information capacity, which QUEST is trying to set up, has set up through the Centre for Energy in Alberta as a website, and will increasingly use. That's where people are at. They don't want to study it to death because all of the technologies and all of the concepts are there.
It's really about packaging it. The community has to want it. We talk about going down; it has to go right down. Whether it's a rural community or an urban community, they have to want it and they have to get it, so somebody needs to have some resources to go out and communicate with them. For those communities doing this work, the person doing that work is overloaded, even in Dawson Creek, with requests to go to other communities.
We need to build capacity quickly to help those communities that have an organic interest in doing this but then face real barriers. Sometimes it's just a few dollars or the lack of an expert in the town to actually give them the advice they need.