I am going to start with expertise. That's a very important topic.
Canada has a very highly qualified workforce. Canada has been a leader—I can elaborate on that—since the early 20th century in hydrogen. There is quite a lot of knowledge in Canada. There are very high-level universities, highly-qualified individuals. At the trade level, there's a lot of training that still remains to be done. Fortunately, a lot of the skills from workers in the oil and gas industry are very much transferable. There is an incremental amount of training for hydrogen technicians for tradespeople, but it's not that they come from a very low baseline. That in a way is a blessing.
There are a number of colleges already in Canada that are developing expertise. There is the College of the North Atlantic, Cambrian College and NAIT in Alberta. There is Red River College and BCIT. Every province has colleges that are very seriously looking at what that upskilling or re-skilling or retooling, if you will, looks like in hydrogen. I have a number of members, actually, who have taken it upon themselves to develop those skills—