Thank you for the question.
I'll have to respond in English.
If I respond in French, it will take too long.
From a solar perspective, I feel that we are a little stalled right now. We don't have a lot of new development going on in Canada right now. I know that our microgrid test facility, which we have developed in partnership with Guelph Hydro, as well as with support from the Ontario government, is meant to support projects that we're looking at, and we see a lot of opportunity.
The federal government has announced some programs that are looking for development of northern Quebec communities, in Nunavik. We're seeing programs that are trying to understand.... With these microgrid facilities, as it has been explained to me—and I've been fortunate to have recently had a tour of a test centre—every small community really has a lot of intricacies that we have to address. When we have a differing mix and differing supply and load mixtures, there are a lot of technicalities that need to be overcome, addressed, and contemplated, such as when we're adding renewable, intermittent technology to a diesel system.
I believe that we are advancing. We're seeing a lot of advancements in that, but I have to say, from my perspective we are a little bit stalled. While we're seeing a lot of development on the solar elsewhere, a lot of new, innovative ways to develop new projects and to continue to drop the costs for the development of utility-grade solar programs, we're not seeing those lessons in Canada. We're using numbers and information from other countries to try to develop plans for what we can do in Canada. We don't have a lot of our own lessons learned.
We developed a number of projects under the feed-in tariff in Ontario that saw a great degree of growth and expansion. The costs have dropped. Many of my coworkers talk about a $6 or $7 per watt module before my time. That's how we measure it. Now we're hearing future projected costs of 35¢ per watt. These are huge advancements in the cost, getting that cost down and competing on a cost basis with the conventional sources of energy.
Alberta has some programs coming about. It would be nice to participate in the 2025 federal electricity targets and the 2030 targets, to see more opportunity for us to innovate and continue to drive the costs down. Module costs have really come down, and now the question is how we can do the installation more effectively and innovate on those fronts. That's now the low-hanging fruit on the cost side of the equation. That's how I would describe the innovative....
Did I answer your question appropriately?