That, again, will very much depend on each place. There are areas where wind is strong. Even though it is not very sunny there, there are ways of trying to use solar energy in the winter. I am not an expert on that in colder places. There are also places where there are hydro resources.
I realize that no single one of them is going to fit all of these, and that, I think, is the beauty of renewable energy technologies. There is not one single solution that's going to work in any place. You'd have to look at what the local constraints are and what the local resources are, and tailor your thing.
The last thing I want to say is that technology is something that is evolving quickly in the renewable energy space, unlike in the nuclear space. What the situation will be in 10 or 20 years from now is not something we should be able to confidently predict at this point.
In terms of the total amount of emissions from these small remote communities, it's fairly small. I think we should first focus on developing these technologies for the grid in places where—