Yes. I guess there are a number of points there.
On your first one around unused electrical generation, as you know, for certain provinces when we over-generate, we tend to have to pay our neighbours to take that power. That was actually the basis of the study we did in Australia, where there's a large penetration of solar. They're estimating that upwards of 50% of their power within the next couple of years will be generated by solar in South Australia. One of the possible solutions was using what is essentially free power coming across the grid to generate hydrogen through electrolysis at specific points on the grid. Also connected to that is the further installation of large-scale utility energy storage and being able to shift a load through different times of the day.
To your second point about managing assets and interconnection, if you're able to transfer power more easily as a utility that operates different loads or is able to manage the loads across different jurisdictions, you're naturally able to balance that more if you can shift it between one side or the other.
I'm not sure if that answers your question on the second part.