The project is not fully developed, but the community systems--for example, the biomass system and these types of systems--have been put in place. To really fully understand the benefits, the project really has to be fully built out. That will be another—there will be 5,000 people living there at the end of the day, depending on the economy, of course—five, six, maybe eight years, to fully understand the benefits.
I can tell you, from having grown up in Europe, that in Germany district systems are very widely used. They're integrated into the urban fabric of the cities. For example, waste energy plants—where waste is being burned—are in the middle of the city in Munich, and they're used to heat housing in district systems.
In Canada we hardly have scratched the surface of making better use of energy sources like waste. We're starting to see those now, as Andrew has pointed out, where we harvest, for example, landfill gas, and then we'll use that as an energy source, using biomass, but there are many, many more opportunities that are available to us. The district system is just the delivery system, but once you have the right system in place, you can use all different kinds of fuel sources over the years, as fuel sources change, to provide energy and heat to a project.
With the district system you build flexibility in. If you don't have a district system your flexibility is limited.