We do have regional energy and resource tables established in nine jurisdictions across the country. I will say that electricity has been identified as a critical priority in just about every one of those table discussions.
The inflection points, of course, are a little bit different because, as I mentioned earlier, the challenges and opportunities are different when it comes to electricity, depending on where you live. In some tables, such as in Newfoundland, where they have excess power from their existing hydro facilities, they are trying to electrify more end use in ports, mines, heating, etc. In a province such as British Columbia, which is trying to open up new parts of the province to critical minerals and further electrification of LNG, they're looking at transmission assets within the province.
Specifically to your question about interties, that is a primary priority in our discussions with both Nova Scotia and New Brunswick for the first phase of what we previously called the Atlantic Loop, which is the reliability intertie between the two provinces that will enable the trade of power and access to broader markets. That will be critical, in particular for Nova Scotia, in being able to get off coal by 2030, and it figures as a prominent priority in those table discussions.