On part of it, I can. My comments really are what I read in the media, what I've seen released, and agreements that get around. It's a complex time because not only is Ontario trying to sort out its future requirements—the long-term energy plan is due out I think this month maybe, Jim?—but they're also entering into or competing for supply into the U.S. for renewable resources and others.
There's a lot happening commercially, but it appears to me that there's an element of Quebec versus Ontario, where's one's trying to sell to the other. If you're doing a buy-sell relationship, you're not sure who's trying to get the better deal, as opposed to whether there is an opportunity to partner. Partnering, in my mind, means that if we're looking to Quebec for part of the answer to Ontario's long-term electricity requirements, it means a capital investment potentially from Ontario wind, and it means developing resources jointly.
I disagree a bit with the idea that we should only focus east-west. I still think that in the long term on climate objectives we can do quite well by working together and focusing on displacing carbon south, because in the grand scheme of things we want carbon reductions at the lowest cost.