Thank you for the question.
I'd like to clarify the numbers you're speaking to. In September 2022, Nova Scotia Premier Tim Houston made an announcement that had two parts.
The first was that the first call for bids, which is how licences are issued for offshore wind projects, will occur in 2025. That means once we become the Canada-Nova Scotia offshore energy regulator, we will administer a call for bids or a licensing process on their behalf no later than 2025.
The second part of his announcement was that by 2030 there will be five gigawatts of offshore wind potential licensed. That doesn't mean there will be turbines in the ocean producing electricity. It means that, at that time, there will be enough licences in place to potentially install wind fields that could generate up to five gigawatts of offshore wind power in the future.
Those are the targets the provincial government has in place, and it is responsible for giving us the strategic direction for having and administering the call-for-bids process on its behalf. Those will be the targets it will use when it's providing that strategic direction to us about future processes for licensing.