Let me start with the nuclear question. Different jurisdictions are going to approach the pathway to net zero differently, and certainly in many jurisdictions nuclear is absolutely part of that. France has just announced that it is building seven new nuclear facilities. Belgium, in response to the energy security crisis in Europe, has announced that it is going to stop the phasing out of nuclear power. Certainly in Canada, Ontario is a major user of nuclear energy. We have been very clear that in a climate crisis, we need to be open to all non-emitting forms of energy, which very much include nuclear. We have invested in the development of small modular reactors, and we will continue to do that.
More broadly on energy security, we need to be able to walk and chew gum at the same time. There are some people, as I said before, who say the energy crisis is such that we should forget about climate change, and there are other people who say the climate crisis is so significant that we should forget about energy security and not offer support to our friends in Europe. I would say both of those are irresponsible positions. We need to ensure that we're doing what we can to help Europe at a time when they are worried about being able to heat their homes and deliver their groceries, but we need to do so in a manner that fits within the context of our climate plan, in which Canada does its part within the international effort to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in line with the net-zero goal, and that is exactly what we are doing and what this cap is intended to be part of doing.