One, for example, that was well known is the TransAlta Project Pioneer in Alberta, which would have been a large-scale carbon capture storage project.
The government had undertaken to fund that project in an amount of up to $315 million. It would have been a major scientific and infrastructure project to test technology on a very large scale.
As we know, we already have virtually a world first in Saskatchewan now for a clean coal unit with Boundary Dam coming on stream in the spring. I think it will be an element of pride for Saskatchewan and for Canada.
In Alberta, TransAlta ultimately decided that the economics did not work for it at this time. These were moneys earmarked in the clean energy fund that were actually profiled over a number of years and that provide, in some instances...there are some moneys basically that had already been approved, that Natural Resources Canada does not need because of such projects.
Other projects have also had some of those challenges, but we have funded, for example, 17 small-scale demonstration projects and two large-scale demonstration projects, the Shell Quest project and the enhanced Alberta Carbon Trunk Line project. So there are a number of projects that have been going forward—R and D projects, carbon capture storage projects—but some unfortunately did not move forward.