Before we go too far along the road of trying to figure out how we're going to build more transmission capacity, we're working right now on trying to figure out whether there's an economic case to be made for better coordination between the provinces. We also have to work out how we're going to use the line.
There's no point in building a line if you don't have some agreement on how it's going to be used. Whether that's used to displace building new gas generation in Alberta, or simply to get operational efficiencies for when there's excess in Alberta.... You know, if they turn to wind as their new source for replacing all of the coal, there will be times when the wind is blowing and times when the wind is not blowing. Rather than using only gas generation to help them with that, if we had a long-term agreement on intertie to help them out, maybe they could reduce some of the spending on building gas plants and we could achieve some capital cost savings with the intertie build.
That was kind of a long-winded answer, but I think the short answer is that we need to get the commercial entities together on both sides of the intertie, figure out how we could use an intertie if we had it, and then work out what we need to build.