Maybe I'll deal with it, because sometimes things get mixed up in our minds. Firstly, in terms of spent nuclear fuel, there is a Canadian policy. It's called the adaptive phased management policy, and of course the Nuclear Waste Management Organization are actually tasked with developing a location here somewhere in Canada to store spent nuclear fuel, which would be high-level waste.
There is of course a proposal to build an intermediate-level waste storage facility, which again Pierre can speak about, because this is an OPG situation, but the intention is that this deep geological repository will also go through an environmental assessment. The steam generators are low-level waste. The last time I appeared before the commission I talked about that.
We have to be clear that there are really three things. There's high-level waste, where there's already a Canadian policy approved, adaptive phased management, to find a location and store; and in the meantime we store on site, either in spent fuels or in dry fuel containers. If you come to any of our sites, you would see those in operation. And then there's intermediate-level waste with a deep geological repository, and low-level waste is all about volume reduction. Our intention with the steam generators was to achieve that volume reduction.