I think there are really two ways to achieve the data, and different countries make use of both methods. There are really three things our industry wants: the flow rate, the permeability, and the temperature of the source rock. Those three things can help you with the economics of a project.
For example, in some of the government-funded projects I spoke about, one of them being the Borealis project in Valemount, which is sustainable and a demonstration, certainly we would like to see the government-funded programs have to submit their data so that other developers can use it as well. One way to get a whole bunch of data all at once, if you're going to support projects with federal dollars, is to have them actually share their data so other people can learn quickly from it.
Another way for them to do it is to instead invest money in the Geological Survey of Canada themselves to drill their own wells. That's actually been done in the Yukon. The Yukon Geological Survey has drilled two wells in the past six months. You see both styles of that approach happening.
Really, though, we just need to get more data. It's a big country, so we need to prioritize different regions, fill in the gaps in the metadata, and the developers will take over. We truly are the last country in the world. We love geothermal, and we want to get onto it, but the risk still is fairly high with the wildcatting of the wells.