Again, we need to look at some of the opportunities we have across the country that may be somewhat unique and different. How do we take maybe more of a clustered approach? How do we pursue that opportunity in, let's say, the Edmonton region? How do we pursue a similar opportunity in Toronto, Hamilton and those areas, focused on the uniqueness of those areas and how we can scale up quickly? I'll keep coming back to that. It may require a different approach than having a bucket of incentive programs and sprinkling them across the country, instead looking at where we can achieve the biggest impact quickly. I keep coming back to scaling and scaling up quickly, because that's the need here.
I've been focused on climate change policies over the last 20 or 30 years, and I think sometimes that need for quick action and the opportunity we have available are missed. It does require a very focused effort, maybe regionally and geographically as well, but one involving all orders of government working closely together. We have a hydrogen hub that involves the mayors from our region, which is one-third the size of Alberta economically. There's an opportunity to really pull together a coalition of governments to pursue that strategic approach.