Okay.
Mr. Cooper, I'm glad to see you take a strong stand on renewables. I come from an agricultural area, and we like to see that. We've had some concern here, mainly from the left-wingers in the country, about the fuel versus food debate, which I think is a phoney debate. I'm glad to see you supporting renewables.
But I want to challenge you a bit on your commitment to wind. At the end of your presentation you say that nuclear has moved to the end of the line compared with efficiency, natural gas, and wind. We've heard a lot about the low prices of natural gas right now. But we have some wind generation in Saskatchewan and are finding that it's very inefficient. Your construction costs here put it at about two-thirds of nuclear, and it's 30% effective.
Would you maybe talk a bit about both wind and solar? You have them at $80 per megawatt, and nuclear at $120. Both of those are very intermittent sources of energy.
Maybe Mr. Tremblay wants to respond to this as well.