At the federal level, there was modelling done, for example, with the Canada Energy Regulator's energy futures report, which was released in 2023—there will be another one coming next year—and which provided insights into how much an electricity system may grow by 2050, given the decarbonization of the economy and what some of those sources might be.
Ultimately, though, it is the decision of the provinces to decide what generation they are going to build and what the inflection points will be. As a federal official, I would be very happy if every province were engaged in that type of energy planning and the development of those types of energy road maps. We've seen them starting to emerge, and I'm going to refer back to Ontario, Quebec and British Columbia, which have now done that.
To the previous member's comment, the Province of Ontario, for example, noted the need for 18,000 megawatts of new nuclear required by 2050, and then turned around very shortly afterwards and announced 4,800 new megawatts at the Bruce Power site, which was in direct reflection of the fact that they understood they were going to need that power.
However, you need to do the road maps and the planning, and the provinces are starting to move in that direction. We'd be very happy, at the federal level, to see each and every one of them do that.