Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I'm going to start with something I've been waiting to ask, and I don't know if you folks are the right people, maybe not, but we're running out of committee time here to ask this. I'm from the Prairies. When it was settled 100 years ago, people came out and many of them ended up digging down to find shelter and then covering themselves up. They found that to be a reasonably stable environment.
I'm surprised. I waited for someone to suggest that there's something we can do underground. I would be interested in your take on that--we're all going to spend a fair amount of time six feet under. Once you get down to a certain level there, you're below the frost line; it seems to me you have a stable environment that settles down your energy use and those kinds of things.
You have a comment on it, Dr. Abiola, but I'd be interested in hearing from Net-Zero as well, as to whether that's being considered as a major part of Net-Zero planning in terms of housing and those kinds of things. I think we have technology to get the light into the areas. I understand why people may not want to live there, but is it energy efficient to do that?