I would suggest that importantly, if Canada's place in the world in clean energy technology and innovation is second only to Japan, I'm inclined not to label that as laggard.
As I said earlier, both in the case of biofuels, planned spending for the eco-energy efficiency program and the eco-energy innovation initiative in 2015-16 is $7.2 million less than in 2014, and this is by design. It reflects the funding needs of the projects being supported for this fiscal year. The program is approaching the final year of its five-year mandate, with most projects expected to be completed by March 31, 2016.
I think that in fairness, the exercise there is to evaluate their effectiveness and policy and strategy around...the return of these programs will be designed based on what's working. So far we have every indication, if we are second only to Japan, particularly in clean energy technology and innovation, that we're coming from a position of strength on this.