Yes. On the issues around the clean electricity regulations, we've been very clear over the past year, both with officials within the department and with elected officials, in terms of what our concerns are. We've been very clear that our concerns have to do with the reliability impacts and the cost in some jurisdictions in the country—most particularly in Alberta, Saskatchewan and Ontario, but not exclusively in those jurisdictions. Our concerns are not political, as I kept telling people over the past year. This is a question of physics. It is just basic physics.
The clean electricity regulations were developed and based upon economic models. The people in my sector are responsible for reliability, and their reliability projections are not based upon economic models. They're based upon reliability models.
The principal concerns we've been bringing forward are the concerns of the system operators and the people who actually have to deliver electricity to customers. We see an impact here, potentially directly, on reliability and on rates in multiple jurisdictions in the country.