Yes, I think it is. Again, most of the Canadian population is within roughly 100 miles of the U.S. border, and there's significant density, which makes the economics of gas distribution very good. In less dense areas you need different triggers in order to bring the fuel into the marketplace. Industrial demand is often the most significant trigger. So you have communities like Red Lake, Ontario, where there was a mine development opportunity. There were a couple of communities around it that wanted natural gas as well. The economics as stand-alone for those communities to get gas wasn't good enough. The federal government, through, I believe, the FedNor program, made a contribution in order to facilitate the development of the project. So you have significant industrial load met with natural gas, and then those communities could get access to it as well. That's the kind of model, and there are precedents that have been used over time across different provinces and territories in Canada.