The short answer is yes, it will look very different.
We haven't done an assessment specifically on the Canadian market, but more broadly speaking, the tipping point is projected to be when the price of an electric vehicle is comparable to the price of a fossil fuel vehicle, or even within 5% or 10%. At that point, economically it doesn't make any sense to buy a fossil fuel-powered vehicle in the same range. There's less maintenance, less fuel costs, less rotating components, less moving components generally speaking, in electric vehicles. It's actually to the benefit of the automobile manufacturer to sell an electric vehicle. They have less maintenance concerns. From the owner's perspective, the warranties are longer. Aside from your tires, you're not changing much all that often, except a new battery, I suppose, every seven or eight years.
Once that price differential within 5% or 10% is reached, I believe it's going to be a fast change. We've done some assessments in New Zealand on this working with the government there, and it's shifting.
Then, connected to electric vehicles—and I know this wasn't quite your question—is the autonomous element of ground transportation and how that will impact the industry. Broadly, infrastructure is going to be quite significant.