Mr. Friesen might be in better shape to answer that, since I know they have some projects at various stages of development in Alberta, but absolutely.
The challenge, though, is that you do have real issues that have presented themselves, in part because our government and our regulators were very bearish on renewables. They didn't believe that renewables were cheap. They didn't believe that it was going to happen here. We put forward a market that said, “Guess what. We'll pay you for energy, regardless of whether you offer reliable services. Show up this hour with your energy, and we'll pay you for it.” Now we're suddenly really surprised that, when the cheapest form of energy in the world is solar power, people are doing exactly what our market tells them to do.
Probably, had we thought about this three or four years ago and been willing to say, yes, this is something that's going to come here, and saw companies like Mr. Friesen's building solar projects anywhere they could find land in and around the city of Calgary, for example, we would have avoided this. It's problematic, but it's not a problem that came about just overnight.