Let me frame it by putting some stuff in perspective. Today, there are 19 CANDU reactors operating safely and reliably in Canada across two provinces. There are, I think, a total of 29 CANDU reactors operating across the world.
This is reactor technology that was born out of AECL well back in the 1950s and 1960s, and it took on a great need in the country. It should not be lost on folks in Ontario that 60% of the electricity produced in this province comes from CANDU reactors.
The reactors themselves are reliable and safe and have demonstrated, through operation by OPG and Bruce Power, very successful refurbishments that have kept this technology operating and providing clean, reliable power over the last several decades. It should be noted that these reactors continued to be produced even after the United States stopped most reactor production and construction after Three Mile Island.
The fact that you have safe, reliable reactors with CANDU is remarkable, to say the least, but it has also allowed us to spur into another more advanced industry with small modular reactors, which three provinces—New Brunswick, Ontario and Saskatchewan—are becoming heavily invested in. We know you cannot solve the decarbonization problem with renewables alone, so if you want to get off fossil fuels, you have to use nuclear. That's an established fact.