I'll do the best I can.
Carbon capture and storage, of course, is a huge $1.5-billion expenditure investment at Boundary Dam Unit 3. It initially ran into some technical glitches, but things are progressing at a much better pace right now and look much more promising. I will add that whether or not that particular technology will be expanded and moved outside the province for commercialization purposes remains to be seen. The IP is not actually owned by SaskPower; their sales plan, I think, is General Electric or somebody like that, some massive engineering firm. But they do point to the fact that China is going to continue to burn coal for a long time, and they're very interested in that type of technology.
With respect to potash, I'm only seeing what I'm hearing in the news, which is that there are good things and bad things about this. I think farm producers are concerned only in terms of having less competition in terms of where they're going to buy their nutrients and fertilizer. However, the rest of the province sees this as a positive move. If the merger were to occur, the head office would remain in Saskatoon for the organization. At present, that particular merger is viewed as a very positive thing and actually necessary in light of the new potash world we're in.
