First of all, I haven't read the report itself, so I can't comment on it. With respect to these forecasts and how that might differ from what's there, these forecasts were locked down last August, and since that time there's been a tremendous amount of activity in Canada with respect to climate change and responding to that.
We've had the commitments that came out of the COP21. We have a new energy policy in Quebec. We have Ontario and Manitoba joining Quebec and the Western Climate Initiative. We have Saskatchewan—let's move across the country—going to 50% renewables in power generation by 2030. We have the carbon tax, the cap on oil sands emissions, the methane reductions, and other things in Alberta. B.C. is committed to the methane reduction and looking at making some changes to its climate. A lot has changed since these numbers. When we rerun these numbers this year, we'll have policies that are closer and different than they were. We'll have to wait and see the outcome of that to see how that will affect things.
You asked about the analysis. We look at the provincial plans and look at plans utility by utility, and those plans will undoubtedly have changed given the policy changes that have been occurring in the last year. All that is to say that we'll see how it all sorts out when we do the next version of Energy Futures, which we're targeting for this fall.