Thank you. I appreciate your comments.
To get right to the point on what regions make the most sense, when we evaluate this through some of our pan-Canadian study work, we look for, first, regions that have the highest concentration of wind and solar energy, and where in one region you may have a surplus of wind energy that can be exported to a neighbouring region. In the analysis, we looked at certain areas—the Maritimes and Ontario—where today you're seeing some curtailment of wind resources, and they can be some of the early candidates for some transmission expansion to neighbouring provinces.
The other thing we've looked at in these studies is using transmission to facilitate the transition to a renewable grid. We're looking at the provinces that are more thermal based and could support additional renewables coming from outside of the province, but we're also looking at the building of new renewable capacity in their provinces and exporting. In provinces such as Saskatchewan and Alberta, which have an installed capacity that is more thermal—coal and natural gas—we're looking at transmission as one of many tools that can help facilitate that transition.