Thank you, Mr. Chair.
We have a huge oil and gas and nuclear lobby, and we're often told how difficult it is to make things happen and how regulations and everything are standing in the way.
California went from 770 megawatts in battery capacity to 10,379 megawatts in a period of five years. That now allows them, for 40 out of 48 days, to run pretty much straight on renewables, and they can go to natural gas or whatever else as a backup, so that battery capacity has been revolutionary. It has been even more revolutionary in Texas.
Mr. Simakov, what is the potential in Ontario? We see that they're talking about, I think, 1,784 megawatts from 10 projects coming online by 2028. However, that's still like one-tenth of what California has done in six years. How much more capacity can we get online, and how will that change it, not just for going to clean energy but for consumers and the price they're paying for household energy and for industrial operations?