Thank you, Mr. Speaker. I'd like to thank the Member for the question. I believe that we do have a real opportunity here. Yes, it will cost in the range of $200 million to convert some 1,400 units, but $180 million of that will be left in the Northwest Territories, which leaves a large portion of that capital investment spent in the North, from on-site development, transportation, northern materials from northern manufacturers with their products, and site development costs. More importantly, to do the conversion, we will have local opportunities for local residents in our communities. We're looking at a two or three-year employment opportunity, whereas, in most cases after development, everything shuts down and nothing happens in the North.
Because of that, the benefits outweigh the investment by what we're looking at. As I stated, we're looking at a capital investment where $180 million from this project will remain in the North for northern manufacturers and communities and, more importantly, the residents of the Northwest Territories to generate long-term employment over two or three years. Thank you.