In the province of Quebec, Hydro-Québec undertook a project over the last five years to add something we call “distribution automation”. There are many switches on the distribution system, and before you would always have to wait for a customer to call to say his power was out, and then people would take that information, map it out either on paper or in a computer system, guess where the power outage was, and then send a truck to search for the power outage. Now Hydro-Québec has installed, I think, close to a thousand of these remotely controllable motorized switches, so instead of waiting for us to send a truck to switch it out, we're able to do it from the control centre and get people's power going much faster.
Hydro-Québec is a very large utility, a very leading utility, and they did that project with very, not rudimentary technology, but it wasn't rocket science in any way. It was adding a motor to a switch on the pole. It was a good model for the rest of Canada to emulate. That's one good example.