Given that this is more of a policy question than an infrastructure bank question, I'm happy to answer it.
In the first instance, the Canada Infrastructure Bank is a tool for governments to use to help fund projects. It's the government sponsor and its proponent that lead an infrastructure project. The bank is there to help where appropriate and to crowd in private capital if the model fits. Making decisions that pertain to procurement, local regulation, and how that's being built are really the domain of the government sponsor of that asset, wherever it may be, and of course, it's better for us to deal in hypothetical terms rather than talk about any specific project.