People in Alberta woke up on January 1 and had to pay a carbon tax for their home heating needs. B.C. has already had a carbon tax for fuels such as natural gas or propane or diesel.
One of the issues is that we haven't given consumers a choice. You can pay a carbon tax and keep on supporting a fossil fuel-based industry, or you could have purchased renewable heat, but we haven't yet caught up to being able to supply renewable heat, so consumers are stuck with having to pay a carbon tax.
What we like to show is that we can compete at a lower cost and have no exposure to a growing carbon tax or to commodity fluctuations, because we're more like a utility, in that what comes up, Mother Nature provides for millennia. It never runs out, so we can have very, very stable prices.
I think it's a bit challenging for consumers to have to pay a carbon tax when they would choose not to and to use a renewable alternative. We haven't yet had enough demonstration projects or build-out for them to actually make that choice. I think many consumers, especially when they're modelling what their costs may be in the future, would choose something renewable that, again, has no exposure to carbon tax and no commodity price risk.