I think I understand your question. Clearly, there is a whole exercise of strategic economic development that can be done on the basis of policy options to reduce greenhouse gases. Quebec has a comparative advantage: it produces green energy. In the current context, it is an extraordinary option that can help with the export of electricity, but it can also help industries such as aluminum.
We have been talking for a long time about how we could bring more local added-value to the Saguenay and Quebec economy, including through the secondary and tertiary processing of aluminum products. But all these processes are very energy intensive. The fact that the energy we produce is green at the outset is part of an economic development policy. That's clear.
All of these opportunities that are tied to a more strategic and climate-focused investment can be very attractive to citizens, and bring about changes in their attitudes and in how they do things. I would say that Quebec is well-positioned, as you mentioned, directly and indirectly.
I believe that, in the context of our work, it is clear that we need an interprovincial transmission system for electricity. Right now, by definition, these are systems that are managed by province. The big challenge is how to create an east-west harmonization of our distribution network, in the context. This is a central question.