Thank you very much.
One thing I'm hearing this evening is that one of the ways we could help Canadian industry increase its access to certain kinds of American contracts under the new administration would be to do a better job at greening Canadian industry, and also at documenting the extent to which Canadian industry is already green. Some of that is because we don't have environmental standards or criteria built into our own public bidding here in Canada, which we've heard is one of the reasons our documentation system lags behind that of others. I also appreciate that it's not a system you can build overnight, which I think is all the more reason to get started sooner rather than later.
I am wondering if each of you could provide some perspective, from your own industry, on what the beginning of that process looks like. What are some of the things you would like to see Canada start to do, not just in terms of the criteria that it sets for its own bids—although certainly if you have any commentary on that, that would be great—but also what that process of documentation would begin to look like for Canadian businesses, and a pathway to getting to where we have the kind of documentation we need to be competitive in other international markets where governments are bullish on wanting their public projects to meet stringent environmental criteria?
I'll maybe start with Ms. Cobden from the Steel Producers Association.