There's a lot of math and a lot of electricity, and there are a lot of things that have to go on here, not the least of which is siting, which is huge problem for transmission. Any time you build something new, it takes forever to get transmission approved. It can take decades.
Perhaps the best thing that was done in Ontario was the setting aside of corridors 25 and 30 years ago in urban planning, which didn't deal with all the issues but certainly made it a viable alternative for us to build new transmission in Ontario to move generation around the province. Again, it's a question for study. My instinct, as a business person, tells me in the next... These are very long-life assets, too.
Let me abstract away from the political cycle, which is three years or four years. These assets live forever. The transmission corridors live forever. The generation assets live, in many cases, 50 or 100 years in the hydraulic case, and certainly in the nuclear case, 50 years, and in the gas case, 20 years easily, but we can repurpose them for at least another 10. These are very long-lived assets, so answering the question in the context of multiple decades is a business proposition that's worth looking at.