What we're looking at right now in Canada is application development. What we are developing is a nuclear battery essentially. We've been able to license the technology from Los Alamos laboratories, and our action has been to scale that technology to allow it to be of commercial use.
What we would like to do with the technology is to provide clean, safe nuclear energy—about five megawatts, which would last about eight years at 100%—and also provide high-temperature heat where required. What we're looking at is not entirely on the device itself, because we have the engineers, the technical capability and the licences to understand that technology.
Where we want to work with universities and communities is on how we can use this technology to really empower and enable.... I used some examples before, in terms of remote communities we've talked to that are looking for clean drinking water, or being able to have reliable heat or to turn electricity on. What we are trying to do with the universities is to really look at those applications.
To be more specific, what Westinghouse has been doing is sponsoring OTU, for example, with scholarships for women in STEM. We've been working with McMaster to understand what we can be doing together to look at technologies. We're also working with the Saskatchewan Research Council to see what applications Westinghouse can do in western Canada. We're not just focused in Ontario.