Sure, and if you'll allow me just to flip to...so I can be a bit more precise about it—or not. It's going to be easier if I don't go through all the paper.
Essentially, the clean energy fund was a $1 billion five-year program. When it was introduced over five years, it would have been at $200 million each year. The reality is that this largely has to be very responsive to proponent proposals, including carbon capture and storage sequestration. We have three large projects that have been earmarked, representing $465 million of that original billion dollar amount. For those, we have to be responsive to when the private sector participant is actually going to go ahead with a program.
What you're seeing here is not so much an increase as a reprofiling of moneys to try to align it better. We're simply changing the distribution of the billion dollars over the five years to better align with the requirements of the project partners we have.
Overall, of the billion dollars, I should add, $205 million was moved over to home retrofit programs. That was a Budget 2010 decision, I believe. Beyond that, we're essentially trying to work with the outstanding portion of that program and make it work as best we can.
Apart from the carbon capture and storage projects, we've funded over 20 projects—clean energy demonstration projects—across Canada, which I could elaborate upon if there is time or inclination.