If I can add on the safety question, these appliances are CSA-approved. There may be supplemental provisions from province to province on the appliances. The utilities themselves are in the business of putting products that have safety implications into the home for use in furnaces, water heaters, cooking, barbecues, and a whole host of applications. Safety is the first priority, and they're not going to put one of these things on the end of their system unless it meets the safety standards they set.
Your second question was on whether utilities would consider participating in such financing arrangements. I think Mr. Sanford noted that Enbridge is doing that right now. The short answer is yes. There may be implications utility by utility as to whether it is permissible under their regulatory framework. Of course all utilities are regulated by a provincial utilities board because they are monopoly utilities in their franchised areas. But there are many programs in place to assist consumers with appliances in which utilities are involved. In fact we're looking at a whole host of other applications to this in order to make it as simple as possible.
As the chairman noted, for the consumer simplicity is key. That's something the utilities are driving at all the time.