Thank you.
My views on that are basically the same as what I said earlier. I think we missed an opportunity to be prepared for the fact that solar and wind have become some of the cheapest electricity generation resources in the world. Because of that, we're caught in a little bit of a policy problem.
Will it detract from investment? I think it will, absolutely, in the near term. The government has told people that there are going to be changes in the transmission regulations, that there are going to be changes in the electricity market, and that there are going to be changes in a lot of aspects that reach beyond simply the project approvals for solar and wind. Without knowing that, you're not going to advance a project at all.
That said, we do have a lot of projects. Again, I come back to Mr. Friesen's company, which has projects that are still under construction today, if I recall correctly. Others do as well. This was only for projects deep in the regulatory approval process, not projects that were already under construction. I think the impact happens six months or a year from now. That's when it will really start to be felt on the construction jobs front. It's earlier on in the engineering, design, front-end, legal services, etc., fronts.