That is correct. It started primarily with their Green Energy and Green Economy Act. Largely, they were trying to encourage renewable energy manufacturers to locate in the province, and to do that they encouraged developers to build renewable energy in Ontario.
However, to get that renewable energy onto that distribution system causes lots of local issues, right? When the wind blows really hard it's feeding a lot of power into a part of the grid that wasn't designed for it. It can cause voltage to come up. Voltage has to be stable within a very limited band. So what you need to do is put these voltage-regulating devices along the line that will tick the voltage up and down, based on whether the wind's blowing hard or not. We were never able to do that before, because to run the communications between all those devices would have been very expensive. One thing the federal government did that's been great for the industry is that they granted the utility industry, the electric companies, wireless spectrum—something that they usually sell to the Bells and Rogers of the world—and they granted it for a very nominal fee so we can use it for our utility operations.
So in some of the projects that the utilities are doing, they're saying let's use this wireless spectrum that we got from the government for free, and try to get all these devices to talk fast enough in a way to accommodate the renewables. Now, the same technology—
I'm out of time, sure.