Maybe I'll just comment that one thing Canada lacks that the United States has is a federal electricity regulator in the sense of a FERC-type entity that can work with regional ISOs in helping to implement policies around the integration of markets, looking for lower-cost resources, and whatnot. These are mechanisms that have developed over time. In Canada we still organize our electrical markets very much along provincial boundaries, and many of the regulations—the rules that exist between those markets—are stuck in the 1900s. These are things that have been around for 100 years or so and haven't really adapted very well to this notion of the ability to move electricity across provincial jurisdictions.
Ironically, it wasn't always the case. We have hydroelectric power plants in Quebec that are tapped into Ottawa. Their original purpose was to support the pulp and paper industry that existed here at one time, and they were established for the resources that were going to be developed. It didn't matter so much that there was a political boundary between the two. Increasingly, it's something we should look at more carefully and think about how we modernize regulations. How can the federal government work with provincial system operators to help support the integration of markets and ease the flow of electricity across those markets, particularly if it's characteristic of the type of electricity that we believe is right: low-carbon electricity to meet our needs when we need them?