Typically, when I'm talking about that, it's not the government entity itself that is procuring, but a government agency on behalf of ratepayers. For instance, in Ontario, the Ontario Power Authority is procuring renewable energy and then passing that cost on to the ratepayers. It's trying to increase the amount of renewable energy by something less than 10%.
In British Columbia, it's BC Hydro, typically, that procures it. In Nova Scotia, it's NSPI. Most jurisdictions in Canada have a goal for increasing the amount of renewable power in the province and there's some entity within that province that's in charge of contracting for that.
That's separate from governments purchasing, on their own behalf, renewable power. But you do see that on occasion, so we have a number of cities and municipalities that would be buying renewable power. The Ministry of the Environment in Ontario is buying it for its own operations. In the past, various entities of the federal government have bought renewable power for their own operations. In fact, Transport Canada is currently a customer of Bullfrog Power.
In addition, in the United States, both those things occur, so you have on one hand governments procuring for ratepayers and governments procuring on their own behalf for their own consumption.