Thank you.
Thank you, colleagues.
Thanks for the interesting testimony today. I do have some questions, but first of all, let's acknowledge that energy consumption in Canada is rising, as it is everywhere in the world, and technology consumption is a large part of that. If we're going to have a technological economy going forward, we're going to have to produce more energy, because technology consumes more energy as we continue to deploy more of it.
Really, there are three sources of energy in Canada. There's electricity, which is about 40% of the consumption of energy. There's industrial power, which is mostly natural gas. It's about 30% of the energy consumed in Canada. Then there are motive fuels, which represent the other about 30%. I'm challenged to see how we're going to get, in 11 years, to a grid that does away with natural gas and does away with motive fuels. It effectively loads up the 40% of power with an additional 2.5 times or 1.5 times additional electricity, when we have barely grown electricity at all in the last handful of years. Can you please explain how this equation squares at the end of the day?