Yes, I do. Thank you.
We've actually put a proposal in to the federal government for a similar project. We've partnered with WEICan out of Prince Edward Island's PEI Energy Corporation. They have a prototype working for a hydrogen/wind district heating diesel system already in place in P.E.I. We've expanded that into a large scale project for Cape Dorset within Nunavut. We've made a request to the federal government for development funding for that, moving it from a prototype to reality in the community.
As you've indicated, the difficulty with wind in any community is that if tie it into a diesel system and the wind dies off, you don't have sufficient diesel spinning capacity and you lose power in the community and have to reboot back up. What we were looking at there was the creation of hydrogen storage, then using the hydrogen within the diesel-hydrogen generator sets. Excess wind from that also goes into a heating system, so the district heating system for the whole community is fed off of all of that.
The benefit of this type of system is that it provides stability. You're not worried if the wind dies off or if you don't have sufficient diesel-generator sets on to provide the heat for the communities, because you're storing that heat from the wind.