Thank you for being here today.
I assume we still don't have Siemens.
Ms. Bossé, you talked about smart grids and moving towards a situation in which we have more control over actual consumption rather than just generation. I want to give you an example of my understanding of this.
A couple of years ago, I was talking to an electrical engineer who was working with clients around North America, and one of the examples he gave was about Tucson, where they have a lot of solar. He was helping the utility there work with large users such as Walmart. For example, if the sun went behind a cloud for half an hour or something and the generation dropped, they would compensate for that by getting energy users like Walmart to reduce their air conditioning load for a period of time instead of paying the extra amount to fire up some baseload generation, and I think he even said that Walmart would get a cheque for providing that service. That's an example of what these smart grid technologies would do.
Is that what you were talking about, and how do you see that working in Canada?