No, it wasn't that they were cheaper. It was that they're using electricity and natural gas, and almost no other fuels like heating oil and so on. I was just making the point that when we're looking at energy policy and the data we need for energy policy, we need to take into account that in a lot of non-urban areas people aren't necessarily relying on just their local utility. They're relying on fuel delivery, propane delivery, fuel oil delivery, wood, and those kinds of things, and those are costs to them as well. We have to think about the differences between urban and rural Canada.
On May 22nd, 2018. See this statement in context.