The short answer is yes. It was my privilege, sir, to sit on the board of directors of Northern Canada Power Commission for a number of years back in the 1970s, representing Yukon. So the power situation north of 60 is something I'm reasonably familiar with.
That said, to contain the borrowing limit of the various territories in the cap for all of that territory is something that may need to be carefully considered. All you have to do is look at Quebec Hydro and Ontario Hydro as to the amount of their indebtedness. But it gets a rate of return as long as you have a market that's going to service that debt.
The market in the north is very, very fragile, in that if you have a mine shut down it could take away...like the Faro mine, the Anvil mine, which took away about a third of the revenue from the energy corporation, or NCPC in the day. So you have to be very, very careful as to how you structure it, because it can look good one day, but if there is an economic downturn and you only have one or two customers on that grid, you've got a serious problem. It's all about rate of return on your investment.