I think we have a reasonable record in terms of protection. Again, the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission has worked on this. I myself have done some work on the dangers of low levels of radiation, and policy and regulation around that are quite strong.
Remember, of course, that radiation does not just come from nuclear power or the waste from nuclear power. It is experienced every day by technicians who are doing medical treatments, by people working in dentists' offices and so forth, and we have, I think, a well-developed regulatory scheme here. What we have to do, I think, is not give way to the suggestion that the need for speed in the deployment of SMRs should allow us to relax or change the regulatory framework.
In my mind, that's the danger. It's not the danger that what we have is not enough. The danger is that we may be tempted to reduce the protections we currently have.