Thank you.
One of the key aspects of that road map that was endorsed unanimously by the Council of Energy and Mines Ministers in their presentation of it at the rollout in 2015 was the actual application of what people had encouraged and thought was beneficial from both a federal and provincial standpoint.
In the lead-up to that, the thought was to invest in the demonstration and pilot projects to help understand what the cost opportunity or benefit might be and how you could advance certain applications, whether it's run of the river, as we're hearing about, or other types of applications, such as a thermal grid network opportunity or solar thermal energy or all of the above. That was one area I think we would like to continue to see move forward, that opportunity to partner with industry. We're starting to see those initiatives, such as SDTC, being a key aspect for that.
The other area we were hoping to see was a continued focus on the policy application. In that road map they outlined the importance of energy efficiency, as we've just touched on. I think that underscores the notion of infrastructure. Infrastructure is something that isn't always seen as directly aligned with energy, but it is. We have to realize that the important part was understanding that as you invest in infrastructure across Canada for roads, water, sewers, buildings, or transportation, that has an energy impact and has an energy demand.