I liked your first message.
The modelling done by the IESO is an hour-by-hour net model of all the supply in the province, imports and exports.
The modelling that was conducted by the independent system operator and verified by our external adviser said there will be lots of hours in the year, particularly in the next 10 to 15 years, when Ontario will have a surplus of clean power to export.
There will also be many hours in a year when Ontario will have to import. It can import bilaterally, for instance, by contracting with a nuclear or renewable power supplier in the U.S. instead of firing a gas plant in Ontario in those peak moments when there's a day of unscheduled maintenance, a day that's not windy or a day that's really hot.
The benefits of GHG show on both sides of the border.
As per MP Murray's question, we will test that again because, as Dr. Winfield said, conditions have continued to change since 2019-20, and we wouldn't make the investment without verifying our due diligence.