I think the starting point is to look at the way our system has grown up. We have the provincial jurisdictions with the electricity, but we have local grids and there is local generation. There's been a lot of investment over the years in that and that has to be where we start from. We can't start in some different direction. I think using that is the base and then looking about at what fits and what works.
One of our challenges is geography. It is an extraordinarily difficult thing to try to take, for example, a large amount of clean, non-emitting hydroelectricity from Labrador and get it into Ontario, for example. You are well aware of the interprovincial challenges, the other jurisdictions you have to go across. I think we have to look at it in realistic bites and try to see where we can make small steps first, where we can make the grids connect, and where we can make the most of our assets.
I think one of the federal government's biggest roles is to try to encourage that and try to support some of it through some of the innovation funds and those sorts of things in terms of development. That's where the federal government can best contribute, but it is about trying to get the provinces to work together. That's one of the key steps.