Sure.
The Alberta market is extremely competitive, but you would also find that industry works together very well to find answers to significant issues. I would say that if properly constructed and an intertie that fundamentally makes a tremendous amount of sense, then we could certainly find a way to make sure it works within the market structure. Again, a lot of that is the lead of the Alberta government, to ensure that happens.
You had asked the question on whether there is a cost. One of the things that is often not talked about from an intertie perspective is where the energy is coming from, and the cost. I think that is very much something that is missed in the conversation.
If you take Site C, just because it's a live example today, it's an 1,100-megawatt facility with a 70% capacity factor. That's equivalent to a large natural gas plant. To build an intertie to export power to Alberta, and to have an intertie, makes very little economic sense. My friend next to me could probably put a project together much cheaper in Alberta, with hydro and other renewables.
In any event, when you think of an intertie, one thing is that the actual cost of the generation behind it is much like the pipeline debate. What are the upstream and downstream impacts of it?