Certainly. Thank you for the question.
The U.K. and much of the rest of Europe are also interested in SMRs, and for the same reason as Canada. They have mature nuclear industries, they have a great deal of expertise and they had very little prospect, until recently, of very large new nuclear builds. SMRs were an obvious way of keeping that scientific expertise active and alive, and recruiting new people into it. It fits that innovation agenda and the science establishment agenda.
However, as people began to investigate what SMRs could do, people have become genuinely interested, as I said, in these different applications from power grid-level SMRs. We see, for example, in Finland, interest like there is in Canada, for northern and remote applications of very small reactors. We see it in France, which began, in fact, by being very opposed to the idea of SMRs and stuck with the large reactors they have. Again, there's an interest in SMRs because of the different things they can do.
I think there are many reasons why people in Europe are interested in SMRs.