Well, under normal circumstances for BDC and EDC—because they do run their own accounts on commercial terms, so that goes on their financial statements—they can't normally take on weaker companies. The only way this can work is if the money comes from the Canada Account, and those are the funds that are for the account of the Canadian government; they do not go on the books of EDC. EDC basically is a manager of money for the government. They lent the Davie shipyards in Quebec City $382 million, I think, through the Canada Account. That usually would not qualify for regular EDC funding because it was, frankly, a higher-risk investment.
There's no doubt right now that the supply industry is a higher-risk industry, because we've been bled of cash, but just like the Davie shipyards, it's an industry that will recover and will be very viable and very profitable in the longer term. It only works if you take the money from the Canada Account, because we will not meet the normal credit terms they need to impose.
EDC and BDC have been very good. They certainly have been up front--the lender that has been there when all the others are hiding under the table. Still, there is a limit to what they can do under their legislation, and only by using Canada Account money or some kind of similar funding—because BDC got some higher-risk funding in the budget as well—can this work.