I think you're referring to the prĂȘt vert. We have something we call the green loan, which we developed first for our single-building projects in Calgary and in Ottawa. For this we assign a debt to the condominium or strata corporation of the buildings, and they pay a certain amount of money back to the lender over time. It's fully privately financed. We funded the very first loans ourselves, out of our pocket, and then we syndicated that and sold it to another private lender.
In Toronto, we've been doing this with the Toronto Atmospheric Fund. We have $1.5 million committed by them to lend to Tridel, a large high-rise developer in Toronto, and based on that model, Tridel has about $10 million worth of green financing on its various projects.
In Montreal, it is happening on Nuns' Island.
With the exception of the participation of the Toronto Atmospheric Fund, which is there to try to stimulate the market on this, these are going to be private-to-private transactions, and we're working closely with several construction finance lenders to see if we can make this an institutional approach to incremental cost financing.
Does that answer your question?