Thank you for the question.
We certainly engaged our own independent experts when we did our due diligence efforts.
Yes, the project is going to lead to greenhouse emissions reductions. Let me tell you why. The one significant way it's going to do that is by allowing you to have market access to larger geographical generation sources. When you look at, for example, what's happening in PJM and the PJM interconnection, there is a significant transition of that interconnection and all the generation sources from gas fleets, coal fleets and nuclear fleets into more renewable generation. Their entire interconnection queue is basically made up of renewable energy sources.
What this project does is allow for contracts, for example, to take place in the PJM interconnection and move that clean power across our line into Ontario, and vice versa. It also allows any excess generation that Ontario would have to be transported to PJM. That's where you have the gas emission reduction, but you also have the market arbitrage opportunities where you can take advantage of the difference in prices between Ontario and PJM. It's both a greenhouse play and a market play to gain advantage for whatever party is selling.