I think Pierre gave the best example, and that was Izok Lake. This is a deposit that's been known for years. If it were in an area of better infrastructure, it's unquestionable that project would have been developed decades ago.
There's a project north of us called Courageous Lake that has a very large gold deposit. Right at this point, that project is on the cusp of being economic. The main deterrent against developing that project is the fact that it's 230 kilometres away from Yellowknife. It's remote.
In respect to Pierre's comment about mines going electric, yes, if you have grid power you can go electric, but if I have electric equipment underground and I need to power my mine with a diesel generator, it doesn't really make much difference: I'm still burning that diesel fuel. All of the other green solutions that are currently available to us, in terms of wind and solar, are not ones that can effectively run a mine in the north. When you have a mine 300 kilometres away from anything else, your first concern is to make sure you don't kill anybody. We need a power source that we can rely on 24/7. Right now the only thing the industry has is diesel. Yes, we'd love to have electric power, but we need a grid to get to those mines to do that.