Thank you, Chair.
Thank you, Mr. Grant and Mr. Verheul. Both of you are outstanding civil servants, and we deeply appreciate the work you put in.
I wanted to link two ideas and get your comments. The first idea has been rightly discussed here, namely, buy American. The second idea hasn't been discussed as much, and that is the security exemption we have, primarily for defence.
I want to ask the question in the context of a conversation I had earlier today with a representative of Boeing. That representative pointed out that Boeing has been in Canada for 107 years. He considers Boeing to be a Canadian company. Everyone on this call has seen the massive amounts of business that Boeing does, both back and forth. Some of Boeing's products, of course, fall within the security exemption of defence, but many of them don't fall within the exemption.
My first question is, are we defining, for the purposes of the trade arrangements between Canada and the U.S., security in too narrow a fashion, in that in fact our economies are so intimately integrated that the security exemption should not merely be related to items that are clearly defence-oriented?
Let me give you an example. Those of us who live in southern Ontario a few years ago had a huge blackout that lasted two or three days, primarily because of a failure of infrastructure in the United States. Now, that is a security failure, and of course, with the advances of cyber and artificial intelligence and things of that nature, this becomes a far greater risk to all of us and to our well-being.
I'm wondering whether there are areas of discussion that could be entered into, as you gentlemen sit at the table with your American counterparts, in that security is at this point too narrowly defined and it is continually bumping up against the risk to both of our nations.