As I said in my verbal address, the carbon tax in Alberta is going to go a long way to helping that. In January next year, when they start to implement their CCR in Alberta—that's the carbon competitiveness regulation—that's going to raise the price of coal generation there relative to other sources of generation, and it's going to send more power flow to Alberta from B.C. That in itself will do that.
We'll have to see how that pans out. At that point, we could start to see the intertie actually limit deliveries that go to Alberta. The intertie hasn't been much of a limitation in the last couple of years because Alberta prices have been low relative to California prices, so there really hasn't been much of a limitation on what we can send from B.C. to Alberta at most hours. I think maybe when we see the CCR go in place, and as that CCR gets more stringent, I expect there to be more demand for transmission to Alberta. That in itself will help a lot. Carbon taxes do work. Where they've been put in, they certainly work, and I think that's a great mechanism to make things happen in our business.