Thanks.
I'd like to quickly move on to our energy needs for the future. In Canada, the group that puts out those projections or scenarios, if you will, is the Canada Energy Regulator. Its report last year on Canada's energy future had a timeline of the various energy sources that would be powering Canada in terms of electricity generation.
For nuclear, it shows, in 2019, 95,000 gigawatt hours—I'm not sure if that's per year—and then by 2050 that will go up to 96,000. That's a gain of 1000 gigawatt hours, which to me doesn't sound like a huge increase compared to their projections for wind, which goes from 32,000 to 188,000. It would be twice as big as nuclear by 2050. Solar would be going from 2,000—and you know solar far better than anyone else in this country, probably—to 62,000 by 2050.
Here are the experts projecting ahead for nuclear, showing, basically, a stagnation, and yet these other energy sources are showing dramatic increases. Could you quickly comment on that?