I'd say that, as of late, the biggest challenge our industry is facing is the extreme polarization around energy that I referred to in my opening comments. What that fight is doing is creating a lot of regulatory and market uncertainty at the moment in Alberta, and that has significantly slowed down investments.
This is because for investors to make a significant long-term investment in something like a renewables project, which typically has an operating life of 30 or more years, there needs to be long-term certainty around what the revenue stream will look like. While that is up in the air, it's difficult to make those long-term investment decisions.
I think it's really trying to move beyond the polarization on this issue to work on solutions. Solutions that are very important are some of the federal incentives that have been talked about, which I mentioned—the investment tax credits and some of the other programs—looking at collaboration around a national grid, and connecting more of our provinces. Alberta, for example, is relatively isolated compared to its neighbours, and I think that's a problem that exists across the country. There is no reason that we shouldn't be connecting the western provinces so that hydro in B.C. and Manitoba, for example, could be used to supply and clean up the grids in Alberta and Saskatchewan, which typically have relied on fossil fuels for generation. We just need certainty to the extent that we can have it, and we need to try to work together collaboratively.