As a waste-to-energy solution, we are finding ourselves in numerous jurisdictions—not just in Canada, but around the world—in underserved, disadvantaged communities or in communities that lack infrastructure. What we're doing is inherently smaller-scale; it means that we do not depend on a smart grid or a transmission and distribution infrastructure that has to be built in advance.
The answer to the question goes beyond the communities that you're specifically asking about to anywhere in the world that's more remote or that has people. They have waste and they need power. Converting their waste to energy can be done on both a small scale and a large scale.
To the earlier question from Member Trost on what we can do that doesn't involve spending money, the answer in part is that we can re-emphasize Canada's long-standing reputation or commitment to humanitarianism and development in the third world by looking at using the renewable sector as a vehicle for delivering some of this aid, essentially to power societies or to power communities all over the place, including in our own backyard.