I just want to put some numbers on Chris' exact points, which I fully agree with. A 60-year-old hydro-generating plant has fully paid off the capital cost, can produce power for half a cent a kilowatt hour, and can export to U.S. markets that are paying 13¢ and 14¢ a kilowatt hour. I like those profit dynamics. They work.
How do you do that in a way that facilitates the premium of the greenness of that hydro asset?
To get back to Mr. Cannings question in relation to your question, there are opportunities—and I'm going to take you into the depths of trade law here—to have the customer distinguish between a plain old electron and a green electron. Once the customer does that, you're in a much better position from the likeness test under trade law—a much better position.
The more we can do to facilitate our customers south of the border in making that distinction, the much better off we'll all be from facilitating the export of our product.