Yes. We're lucky in Canada to be blessed with a very clean grid generally. Nuclear plays an important role currently with respect to that in a number of jurisdictions, including, importantly, Ontario.
The importance of small modular reactors is something that we have highlighted through the strategy you mentioned. We have a table that has been established to coordinate between jurisdictions and industry and other players the further refinement of positions around deployments of SMRs. Canada's a world leader at this stage, with the investments that have been made in the Darlington facility to create a 300-megawatt grid-attached SMR. We are at the forefront of deployment of the technology. That will provide a bit of a proof point as to where other jurisdictions may be able to apply the technology both inside and outside of Canada.
There is a tension to the work we are doing. In the international conversations we have, this comes up frequently. It's certainly an area of importance with some of our closest allies, including our friends south of the border. I would say that this is an area, generally in nuclear, where Canada has both a deep history as a tier one country in the development of the CANDU reactor and the full supply chain that exists there. By virtue of Cameco and other players, we have both the supply of uranium and the technologies that apply that. It is an area where we do see a particular Canadian niche that is of importance.