We've talked around workers a great deal with this. We've talked about the great Canadian technology and the measuring that's been done and those sorts of things, but those are all being done by workers today who are not being invited to these tables and conversations. They don't have the same clarity regarding the clean technology future that some of us do perhaps, and they need to know that there's a place for them there.
A lot of these folks and their families are going to move further south to the States if the jobs just continue to grow there. There's a new, as I mentioned very briefly before, Inflation Reduction Act. It's a very strong piece of American federal legislation that is changing the landscape and switching the dominant forces of their economy from fossil to renewable or electric. I think they're doing that in such a way that they are talking about good jobs, the ability for workers to unionize and to maintain jobs within companies.
When we talk about clean tech and bringing people along, we have to talk about the people doing the jobs today, who are cleaning up their existing sectors but also planning for those future ones, and that's where we need the investments that have been discussed.
I know we don't have much time, so I'll stop.