I would hope that Elisa Obermann from Marine Renewables Canada would be here to provide a better answer. I can tell you about our perspective on the west coast in the wave space, which is somewhat shared. As we get towards our deep decarbonization goals, as we want to try to meet our mid-term strategy, wind and solar will only get us so far. We're then going to rely on hydro, which requires significant interties, or we're going to start to rely on batteries. While there is a lot of great press around batteries, they are still exceptionally expensive, and they do come with an environmental footprint. If we can diversify our generation resources so that we don't have to store as much, that has huge value.
Tidal, for instance, is infinitely predictable. We can tell you exactly how much power will be generated in 2053 at two o'clock. That has value to the grid operator. When they're trying to decide what other resources to turn on so that the lights are on and everyone can run their air conditioners, being able to rely upon that tidal generation has value.