I think it can affect it in the sense that storage provides another opportunity for managing variability. You can look to manage variability in wind through the use of batteries, through importing electricity from elsewhere, or through the charging of electric vehicles at nighttime. There's a whole range of different strategies to go forward.
We do need to be sensitive to what we see in terms of trends in storage. I guess the one comment I would make about the technologies and the technological improvements that we're seeing is that the technology is moving forward gangbusters. I think the bigger challenge we're going to face is infrastructure to support that technology, which is not just interties. It's building distributed generation or distribution systems to deal with all the people who are going to be putting solar panels on their roofs as well, storage at the home level, and things like that.
We also have to be sensitive to the fact that electricity markets have to evolve. The electricity systems we've designed and the rules that govern them were essentially created to deal with the electricity system we had 10 years ago. We have to start thinking about what the electricity system is going to look like 20 years from now and how the market needs to evolve to change that. Infrastructure is part of that. Market is part of that, but it's going to be more diverse and more decentralized, and we have to put in place an infrastructure that allows us to support that.