There are two very important items. Once a project like the production of electricity from nuclear reactors is given the green light, there are all kinds of people who have to be hired to do the regulatory work, both in front of the CNSC and in terms of environmental assessment, the types of gathering of information, the huge amounts of work that go into that. You can easily see the expenditures of $30 million to $50 million in the lead-up to getting these projects on the go.
We are anticipating in Ontario, obviously, the decisions around Darlington, and already there are people who are at work laying the groundwork for the regulatory compliance, so that we can actually start building plants as we move into the next decade.
So there is an immediacy of employment. There is a spinoff from the types of jobs that are created. There is an uptake in education opportunities in our universities and in our colleges, and there are tax dollars generated from the preparation alone, let alone when we get into the actual new builds. In the refurbishments, we're talking about 1,500 to 1,600 people at the Bruce site, I think, who are working on those revitalization projects, and that alone is quite a boost in the Ontario context.