Storage will be a game-changer for us. In Inuvik right now, if you set your clock on a Sunday and go back to look at that clock on the following Sunday—a week's time—that clock will have a eight-minute difference; the hertz is actually what that is. As for the way it's done, they're called brown spots, and they cause interruptions in the computer services, in the electronics.
One of the reasons that the satellite stations are really interested in working with us is what we can provide, and we can level out those bumps. Every time there is a bump in the satellite reception when they're receiving information, while they just have a bump, an interruption, that whole reception is now at the back of the queue. Basically, everybody is fighting for time on the satellite, and it's minute to minute. If they get bumped, they lose their chunk of time. What we're offering with battery storage and solar is that consistent power curve so that those bumps don't happen.
The batteries are the big game-changer. I think the batteries should be deployed throughout all the communities, in conjunction with the utility as well, because they do provide so much consistency and levelling out of the power curve.