I'll make one comment. The reason I brought up this demonstration project is that Boundary Dam 3 evaluated three technologies, and that's pretty rare. A lot of companies pick one technology and run with it. The Basin Electric Power Cooperative, for example, did that and had to modify it because there were some issues with their first technology. We're not doing this for R and D; we're doing this to find out what the next technology will be at SaskPower.
We want to partner, and I don't want you to think that Saskatchewan is not partnering with Alberta or any other player in Canada. We are partnering up. We're doing it ourselves. We will form information consortiums so that we can all learn. If the chilled ammonia process that TransAlta is using is more effective than the post-combustion amine that I'm using, I'm going to use an Alstom system on my next plant. But if we don't pool our knowledge, we won't get the economics to where we need them to be to make this a viable option, and that's what we're really looking for in joining our forces together.
The demonstration facility is a way to look at, for example, three different technologies that can then be taken to a commercial project. So we think the demonstration facility will actually help commercialize other products faster so that other power utilities can say, “This one fits our portfolio. We'll commercialize this process.” We're not doing it to keep information in SaskPower. It is exactly the opposite: we want to share this with the rest of the world.