Certainly. I think you are, of course, correct that in terms of the amounts of fissionable materials and the amounts of radioactivity that might be released and so forth as the result of an accident from a small reactor, the advocates of small reactors are quite correct that they are very different from what we would see with a very large reactor.
What I think we have to consider with small reactors, as I mentioned in my remarks, is that we have, for the reasons we talked about already, we tend to build large reactors away from people. We tend to build large reactors if we can't build them a long way away from people, with very large exclusion zones to protect people from the consequences of an accident.
If small modular reactors are to fulfill their promise for the various applications that are being proposed for them, they will have to be very close to people.
I'd like to ask the members of the committee here to consider a thought experiment. I walked to the meeting this evening through the massive construction that's going on everywhere, as you do, I'm sure, every day. I walked past a shipping container that was humming slightly. I imagine it had some air conditioning in it or something of that kind, and I thought nothing of it. Imagine if that was a small nuclear reactor of the kind we heard described in the last session that would fit in a shipping container and that it was on an Ottawa street, as some proponents of small reactors have proposed, and propose, I think, in very interesting ways. I think there are things that SMRs can do for us that big reactors can't do.
There, I think, we would have to consider very carefully not just the objective risk of what's in there and what would happen if there was an accident but also the subjective perceptions of people who would be asked to walk backwards and forwards around that every day.