I think many of the skills that are involved with constructing a pipeline are transferable. When we talk about our energy transition to hydrogen, carbon sequestration, small modular reactors, etc., the welding and the earth-moving are transferable, but we'll need some additional training for these new energy sources of the future. Our industry has been around for hundreds of years, and we constantly evolve and adapt to new technologies, but every now and again we're going to need some help from the federal government with training dollars to help position us for those new energy sources of the future.
I would add, if I might, that when I hear about regulatory certainty, I think that's important for these major infrastructure projects, but it's not a race to the bottom. I think what we need is regulatory efficiency. We have so many permitting bodies and so many different agencies involved that are cross-ministerial, cross-departmental and intergovernmental. For major infrastructure projects like this one, and for the new ones to help us transition to a net-zero carbon economy, we need to achieve that regulatory efficiency across all those different government bodies so that we get these projects out of the ground quicker and get them to market.