I look to my colleague here.
I don't know if I can pinpoint a specific jurisdiction that is doing that better, but part of the role governments can and do play around incentives is around providing incentives for new technologies. When I spoke earlier about where we focus our efforts for incentives, the technology that we incent today is not the technology that we incented five years ago, because we're trying to incent new technologies. Government can play many roles. One is providing funding to fill gaps for efficiency programs, as I mentioned, in the industrial sector. It can provide funding for innovation or tax credits for new technologies in the energy-efficiency sphere.
I guess the one area that I haven't spoken a great deal about is the role that government can play in helping to build industry capacity and skills capacity. We need skilled workers. We need people who are fluent in energy-efficiency practices, and that goes all the way to auditors, architects, designers, engineers. We need a workforce to be able to implement all of this energy efficiency. That's a role the federal government can play.