If we are not the only one, we are certainly one of the only countries not to have one. From memory, I would say we are the only one. I could forward to you the documentation on that. Several OECD studies have been done on this, but I can tell you that the United States has one, the European Union obviously has one, as do Japan and Australia. To my knowledge, all the industrialized countries have policies and incentives in place. We have none. There are some for first-generation biofuels—basically corn ethanol—but not for renewable energy sources such as solar, wind and geothermal energy.
Équiterre is currently building an environmental construction project in Montreal—a platinum LEED project—that will be one of the most efficient in North America in terms of energy consumption per square foot. We received no federal money for this project, even though the federal government funded a similar project in Toronto. I personally worked on a green housing cooperative project—social housing, in other words—aimed particularly at low-income households. We did receive money from Quebec, the Quebec Housing Corporation and the City of Montreal, but we received no federal government grant.