It's absolutely a mix of a desire for competitiveness and avoiding risk of leakage. The mix of these environmental and competitiveness objectives drives the move toward instruments like border carbon adjustment in the EU and other places. If we start from a place of strength, if we start from a place where our producers are relatively clean compared with global production, then putting in place that kind of border protection does give your domestic producers a leg-up.
To be clear, our producers of steel are among the cleanest in the world. Our producers of aluminum are among the cleanest in the world. The same goes for fertilizers. Yes, these things will have a beneficial competitiveness impact in Canada.
