Canada has many advantages. I had no intention of being a party-pooper in this statement.
I don't know if this panel knows that Canada is the country that has led the development of the electrolyzer industry. It started at the beginning of the 20th century with a company called Stuart Energy. That company, through many iterations, led to Hydrogenics, to Next Hydrogen—in some ways—and to Optimized Hydrogen today. That know-how is Canadian. A lot of the electrolyzer technology used elsewhere, including some projects that we've looked at in India, for example, were born in Canada.
That's one. Another one, obviously, is the fuel cell industry, which is based on the west coast. Ontario has been the cradle of the electrolyzer industry. The west coast of Canada is the cluster where the fuel cell industry was born.
The know-how, patents and knowledge are here. That's a reason to be proud. That's one of the reasons why I always feel that we should continue to lead. This was the 1987 Canadian hydrogen strategy, but it had a different title.
When I say that we have been leaders in this space, I mean it. We were leaders when nobody was paying too much attention to hydrogen. Now that everybody's paying a lot of attention to hydrogen, we really need to claim our spot.