Thank you.
My question goes to COG. We have CANDU reactors running in the world, in Canada, China, Korea, and several other countries, thanks to the hard work done by the operators and also through COG. Our CANDU reactors remain the best performers among the nuclear fleet worldwide.
Inevitably, some day these CANDU reactors will age and eventually be decommissioned. I assume it is quite unlikely that we are going to see a new reactor, a new build, in Canada in the next years, or even the next decade. So while we have to decommission our CANDU reactors, we cannot decommission our talent and manpower, and the brain power, for example, at Chalk River, or other people working in the field.
I guess for the Canadian nuclear industry to survive and even to grow, we need to create a market globally. Right now, our technology, like our CANDU 6, is a generation II technology. We used to have ACR-1000, which is a generation III. You know that; you know that probably better than me, but nobody has even talked about that, so that's been on the shelf.
If we go to the global market, what technology can we provide, and what should the government do to have a long-term strategy to support the growth of our nuclear industry in Canada?