I would be pleased to share a lot of those details. We do have the capacity to store a very large amount of power over a long period of time. As an example, the traditional pumped storage has been here for a long time. We have some in Niagara. We have some in the United States. There's a good project under development right now in Ontario, 400 megawatts for five hours, which is significant. Depending on the site, this could increase. There's a project right now in the United States being developed. It has 16 hours of 600 megawatts. The technology is there. It's very site-specific, though, for storage.
When it comes to other forms of.... With liquid air, for example, you can add modules, and you can go to 100 megawatts. I think sometimes people don't make the distinction. When they think about energy storage, they think about batteries, which are a very important part of it, but it's not limited to batteries. Right now, the largest battery project under development is 100 megawatts. That's going to be fairly large, but it's soon going to be increased in size, for sure. That might be where some people were referencing the limits of storage.