Thank you.
Mr. Allan, Ms. Romanado was complaining that everybody was taking her questions, and then she took mine. I was going to ask you basically the same question.
First of all, it's been very exciting here in British Columbia to see the rollout of charging stations. Some of that is due to the federal supports, but I see your charging stations popping up around my riding with great regularity. I appreciate that. Five years ago I couldn't possibly have imagined buying an electric car in my riding, because it's an 11-hour drive and there were hardly any charging stations. Now there's one in every little village. Thank you for being part of that.
I'd like to get back to the value chain and what Ms. Romanado was saying about making the EVs themselves and the batteries. I have a graphite mine in my riding. We heard at the natural resources committee that China controls much of the whole battery system. They don't have the minerals, but they buy the minerals and create batteries. They control everything in the middle.
I'm wondering what you see as the danger in terms of even your end of the business and having a North American value chain that we have to create to get China out of the equation.