Absolutely. In fact, we're speaking at the moment with a gold mining company in Ontario that's considering some renewable energy technologies. The concern on the lender's side is that the mine would be their only offtaker. What would happen if that mine stopped, or if for whatever reason that commodity wasn't valuable anymore? Even though the projected life of the mine is sufficient for the loan on the asset, there's a risk there.
There's another risk, just generally, that.... In California, for example, if you're building a natural gas power plant, there's a high likelihood that the plant will not run long enough for the lender to get their money back. The penetration of renewables in California and the duck curve, for example, is making it more challenging to deploy fossil fuel technologies there. Coal plants have already gone. I believe one of their last nuclear reactors, Diablo Canyon, is scheduled to close in the not-too-distant future.
We do a lot of work for a number of clients in California. It's probably our largest power market in North America. The type of work we're providing is really shifting away from fossil fuel—either new builds, retrofits, or repowerings—and more to renewables, distributed energy, and battery storage solutions as that mix shifts from more fossil to more renewables.