 My name is Jacob Irving. I'm the president of the Canadian Hydropower Association. We represent the hydropower developers from across Canada. Canada is blessed with hydropower. We are one of the cleanest and most renewable electricity systems in the world. 60% of our electricity comes from hydropower. And as large as we are, we can still grow. We can more than double our current installed capacity. We're the third largest generator in the world, and we can more than double our current capacity still in size. So we offer a lot of clean, renewable energy, not only to Canada, but we're also an exporter to the United States, and we have the ability to act as a battery to the United States in its pursuit of new clean energy. We have the ability to back up wind power in the U.S., and we've actually pursued some arrangements in that regard. So we're actually, I think, a solution both to Canadian, U.S., and North American energy issues, clean energy issues. I think one of the biggest reasons is because we can act as an enabler for U.S. clean, renewable energy. The U.S. has a lot of wind power potential. It has a lot of its own hydropower potential as well. Canada has large storage hydropower potential, and that is remarkable considering that across North America and the United States there's not as much new large storage hydropower potential in Canada we have quite a bit. So we're able to more than double. And with large storage hydropower potential, PIMSU is a battery backup for variable, renewable sources of energy. So this is a very important grid stabilizing feature that we can offer, and it's something that I think that the United States should be very interested in, and it's something that I also know the United States is very interested in. In Minnesota and Manitoba recently, arrangements have been made where new wind power in Minnesota and North Dakota will be enabled by water power from Manitoba, but we'll essentially act as a battery backup for that. So you'll have new clean renewable energy being backed up by clean renewable energy. And so this is the type of thing we offer, I think, to the United States. And overall, giving us the chance to increase energy security from a continental perspective. And also providing more clean renewable energy on a continental basis. With electricity, you must always meet demand. You can't have interruptions. And the difficulty with variable sources of renewable power is when the wind stops blowing, power stops being made. And so you need something to kick in behind it to back it up instantaneously. Hydro power can do that. And one of the things about hydro power is still of all the different types of electricity and sources of generation, we are the most dispatchable. You can turn us on and off more quickly than any other source. And it's simple when you think about it. You open a gate, you put water through, you run the turbine, you're making electricity almost instantly. And then if you need to shut it off because the winds come back on again, you close the gate, you stop making electricity. And so we're one of the most perfect backups you can imagine for wind variability. And we're also clean and renewable. Our greenhouse gas profile for Canadian hydro power, we have just as low greenhouse gas emissions if not lower than wind power on a full life cycle basis. So it's clean renewable, working more clean renewable to bring on new supply. Generally what's known is whenever you bring on a new hot power generation of any source it's usually more expensive than what was built by 10, 15 years ago. So I mean everyone knows that new power generation by definition is usually more expensive than old power generation. But what hydro offers in particular is stability. What we're able to do is because we don't have a volatile fuel source we have stable renewable water from the hydrological system. We are able to accurately, quite accurately predict how much energy we're able to make over the course of many years. And that gives us the ability to pursue long-term power purchase agreements with customers. And so in a Minnesota case, when we sell power we're able to do contracts that will last for a good long time when we provide a stable price and predictability. When you have a stable price and predictability as a backbone, well then from there you can add more variable sources and do more things. So really outside of sort of any price considerations we provide long-term stable power at a stable price which kind of provides the baseline to the song you're trying to create. Canadian hydropower already backs up the U.S. system and Canadian hydropower can do even more to clean up North American electricity and to bring on greater stability in electricity as well. It's a great partnership when we need more of it.