Northwest Ontario is our own issue right now because of the potential development of the Ring of Fire up there, and also electrifying some of the communities that are currently on diesel. That's a long conversation.
In terms of Quebec, the interplay between nuclear and Quebec, essentially the marginal cost of an electron made by nuclear reactor is close to zero. The marginal cost of an electron made by Quebec's water system is next to zero. Those two electrons fight it out with each other in the market. I think Quebec has experimented with the CANDU reactor. I don't think it's ever been synchronized with the grid. I think they decided to put the reactor in abeyance and decided not to pursue the technology, and given what their hydrology is I can completely understand that. I doubt that there's a future for nuclear power generation in Quebec.
In Ontario we're refurbishing our reactors, which is going to be a five-decade project, and we're trying to keep them alive. Pickering will be shut down but Darlington and Bruce will be refurbished, and I think they finally got the refurbishment in New Brunswick done of Lepreau. I think it's working fairly well. But I don't think there are many people around who think that nuclear has any new built capability in Canada in the near term.