Thank you, Mr. Speaker. The pipeline project, or the Mackenzie gas project's partnership with Imperial being one of those, is ultimately going to make a decision of what package they would go for. If they go with a traditional package of just supplying camp workforce housing without any conversion aspects, this is off the table. If we don't get support from the federal government, this is off the table. Part of the problem we face here is timelines, and commitments have to be made before they make a decision to go down the path of building a pipeline. The timing of it, the volume of it to get it done, we don't have factories in the Northwest Territories that can take on such a demand in such a short time frame. What we have been working on is what aspects of training can we have northerners put these packages together and then do the conversion afterwards, as well as the Minister of the Housing Corporation has talked about what portions of these camps can be built in the Northwest Territories. So there are those aspects.
But let's be clear. An opportunity here does exist. We recognize that and have been exploring that and putting the numbers together on the risks of going down this road and the positive solution that this could present to people of the Northwest Territories. As for myself in addressing it in the budget address, I think it is incumbent on ourselves here in the Northwest Territories, as the Government of the Northwest Territories, to look at this opportunity as a potential to dealing with the housing shortage we face across the North. Thank you, Mr. Speaker.