We have a project that's near and dear to my heart that we've worked on for a few years now. It's called Wataynikaneyap Power. It's an indigenous-led, indigenous-owned entity of 22 first nation communities in the northwestern part of Ontario to connect 17 indigenous communities that are currently dependent on diesel generation. There is an absolute need for the federal government and the provincial government to work together to find ways to transition and build out that capital infrastructure. We're not there yet, but hopefully we'll get there soon.
That's an opportunity, quite frankly, that can be replicated not only in other communities in Ontario, for example, on the east side of Lake Nipigon, but also in other communities in Nunavut, in northern Manitoba, and in other places where there are significant opportunities to look within our own borders at communities that are not only heavily dependent on diesel generation, but suffer from significant outages, reliability issues, people who can't operate dialysis machines when the power goes out, and boiled water advisories.
Quite frankly, having been to some of those communities, I'd say it's a crisis of energy independence, but it's also something that is integral to the social fabric of these communities.