Absolutely. Community benefit agreements take a little bit longer to set up, but they generally have a number of benefits, in that the investment is sure to meet the needs of their community, because the community is involved in planning it. You can often target more concretely these underserved groups that we have elements for in the trade agreement.
Part of our inclusive trade agenda is to make sure that we're reaching indigenous-owned businesses or businesses owned by women, but this is a concrete way to make sure that a certain amount of the project is reserved for these types of investments and that there's training and those types of social investments. We call them “social investments”, but really they are economic investments.