Thank you.
I forgot to mention, when I was talking to Mr. Hutchens in the previous round and in partial answer to what Mr. Zimmer was asking, that I get renewable natural gas on my Fortis bill. It costs me about three times as much when you take into account the fact that I'm not paying any carbon pricing on that, etc. That's certainly the consumer thing. That's a big difference. I'm hoping that can come down.
I'll stay with Mr. Hutchens. Mr. Hutchens, you were talking about the costs of transporting hydrogen and things and all of these extra costs when we're developing new technologies and new transportation systems. Isn't that something where the governments, whether they be federal or provincial, should get involved, so that it's not left up to the energy producers to shoulder and try to compete unfairly against old technologies?
Something like a hydrogen transportation infrastructure.... I'm not a hydrogen technologist, so I don't know what that would look like. Isn't that something where the government itself could step in to say that it's going to do this?
Just like the government builds the highways and provides money for the electrical grids between provinces and across the borders, etc., isn't that something where the federal government could really make a difference?