I would agree with Mr. MacDougall on that the fact that these regulations will provide certainty. It is certainly sorely needed. At the same time, I also want to underscore that they're designed to be flexible. A lot gets made out of the net-zero emissions from the sector by the 2035 target. This is a target shared with the rest of the G7. In the current and evolving design of the clean electricity regulations, the idea is very much that it's not a sort of drop-dead date for gas generation. There's a phase-out going on past that date, and gas can continue to operate in emergency circumstances, within limits, when it's most needed.
That level of flexibility, that recognition that reliability is paramount in the management of electricity systems, is certainly really important. At the same time, we want to be making the most economical and optimal use of gas-fired generation that we can. These regulations help incentivize greater reliance on renewable forms of electricity as well as other sources of flexibility outside gas generation. I think continuing to explore that flexibility in ways that balance the competing priorities that the regulations are after will be helpful.