I'll start, and Greg can maybe add.
Certainly what we have, because there are so many pieces to it, is a volume metric, how much. That's going to tell them a lot about supply and demand. Certainly that sort of information we have, and then, of course, there's the pricing around it. Underlying production or underlying generation for power, those sorts of thing we don't have. When I say pricing spread, it's what the difference is in Ontario for the gas or the crude oil, versus in Alberta, versus in Saskatchewan, or anything like that. You can start to get those differences, plus, of course the historical elements. What's the trend and pattern? Where's it going?
It could be akin to anybody who's trying to decide whether to lock in their mortgage rates or whatnot. I think you could go back to see interest rates in terms of movements, trends, what's happening. Because interest rates are a single number across the country, here you could actually see, by region and district, those differences.
That is stuff we have, and I don't see issues in terms of working with a central agency, in terms of providing that rather than their replicating it. You go to a reputable source for that. You provide all of that information, which betters the overall information within the marketplace going forward. That's where I see that collaboration, this joint government-private entity, where they're providing it, and again, not somebody else trying to replicate and do what's already being done in the market for many years.
I just want to be clear about the limitations of the value to consumers. I think there would be value for those sorts of decisions, but anything beyond that....
I'll comment further to the global, that when entities outside of Canada are looking to invest in Canada and make decisions, we get these random phone calls asking if we can you help them out. You know what I mean. It would be wonderful if they had a place to start as they commence their looking at Canada as a place to invest.