We don't do research and development on our own. I'd call it more applied research. We look around for what kinds of technologies are available in, say, Europe, the U.S., and Asia and can be brought to bear and put together as a system overall. But we do that with our own funding. The projects I outlined here are done with basically 100% funding from the utility to build these systems. Obviously we then charge the customers for the energy that's delivered to them.
Where there may be funds from, say, the gas utility for energy efficiency programs that are available, or from B.C. Hydro, or from provincial or federal governments, those would be integrated with the investment capital. That's where we say there's not a need, necessarily, for explicit funding for these. There's assistance for them and a way to help them along.
To get back to the earlier question on where the federal government could go, besides the encouragement and the vision, probably it's just looking around at the provincial and municipal levels--I think Ms. McKenna has this in her presentation—to see where the federal government has buildings or facilities associated, ensuring that those are available to connect to an energy system. Just from a practical sense, that would help further the cause and make things move along.