I can, and there are a lot of examples. I mentioned Aberfoyle Metal Treaters, which put in a new heat treating centre and is getting the benefit of the two-year write-off to do that. Harry Hall runs the operation based in Aberfoyle. As a result of that, it is now able to do heat treating for Boeing, for a lot of the large aircraft producers, and this is unique in Canada. It has given it a capability that frankly doesn't exist in the country.
What we're seeing now, I think, on the part of a lot of companies.... For example, Promation in Mississauga, a company that was once an auto parts producer and now manufactures most of what they produce for the energy sector, and in fact is one of the leading nuclear welding companies in the world today.... Again, to get to that point requires an awful lot of capital investment, and again, the fact that we've had a two-year write-off in place now since 2007 was a major incentive for them to make those investments. It was an incentive for Celestica in putting in its new solar panel line, and IBM in Bromont, Quebec, which became a centre of excellence within IBM, the only manufacturing part of IBM left in Canada. It's a centre of excellence in microelectronics.
So there are an awful lot of good examples in terms of capital, but what it also does is free up other cash, so that companies like Alco Ventures out in Vancouver can invest in developing new markets, or Mel Svendsen of Standen's Limited in Calgary can invest more in training his employees in new production technologies or health and safety processes. Those are a few examples. I could go on.