Yes. I'm happy to do that.
Basically, the way to look at it is that we have a 2035 net-zero goal right now. We expect that wind and solar will be drivers to getting us to net zero.
We see a lot of demand from corporate buyers to go into long-term contracts, especially in Alberta, with wind and solar providers. Those contracts are based on the carbon price. They're a hedge against the carbon price for a lot of these companies that are going into these agreements. Right now, if we were to sign a 15-year contract or even a 10-year contract, we wouldn't know what the carbon price was going to be in 2032, 2033, 2034 or 2035. It becomes more difficult to sign these long-term contracts when there isn't an understanding of what carbon price will be part of the determination of the value of those contracts.
Likewise, we want net zero by 2035. We're driving to 2035. We don't have clarity on the carbon price for the five-year gap between 2030 and 2035. That makes it hard to determine what the revenues will be for these projects.