We have here all of the components we need. We have the labs. We have the fuel source out of Ontario, with the Canadian Nuclear Laboratories. We have utilities that are interested in the transition. I was just in Alberta, and they would have transitioned away from coal much earlier, and I'm sure they would transition away from the intermediate source of fuel even sooner, if something like this would be available.
We have a history of energy development and leadership. We're climate leaders as well internationally. We have an excellent reputation. We would be a politically safe source from which to export this technology, particularly in light of the current crisis and geopolitical energy security challenges.
Again, we have the academic institutions. I'm constantly coming across people who work for, say, the University of Alberta, the University of Saskatchewan or UBC who have a background in plasma physics or particle science or materials science or mechanical engineering.
We have all the constituent components. We just need to bring them together into a formalized and committed program and have the policy commitment to underpin that.