Thank you, Mr. Tan.
I think the crux of the answer is the rate at which our costs are declining, and as a result of that there will be reduced need for subsidies in the future. In 2009, when Canada began with the utility-scale solar, for example, prices were in excess of $400 per megawatt hour. Last year Canada held its first competitive procurement for utility-scale solar, and the prices that were realized were approximately $150 per megawatt hour, almost three times less.
In Alberta and Saskatchewan later this year there will be competitive procurements, and we expect to see those costs possibly hitting double digits per megawatt hour. I'd say there was a fourfold decline in five years. We expect the decline to continue, though perhaps not at the same rate, and we're rapidly achieving cost competitiveness.