Yes, that does. It got me thinking. Just on Friday I was back home and announced a Government of Canada investment in a clean tech project for biomass in the community of Haines Junction, in cooperation with Champagne and Aishihik First Nations in that community and Yukon Energy. The potential results for that biomass facility would generate two megawatts, and there are substantial resources there for biomass. In terms of being able to really spread that out, even if they have excess supply there, their ability to push out from the generation station of that size for that size of community, they're going to be limited in terms of what they can do. But it certainly serves the residential needs.
Mines coming on line are talking about energy needs, and everybody is trying to fill that. Diversification from a local perspective I think would be very much welcomed if industry picked it up, and then they could say, “Okay, industry has this, it's now available; natural gas is there” and the conversion would start to shift. Is that pattern consistent in Canada and in international markets?