Mr. Chair, if I may, if you look at the Prime Minister's trip last year, he signed some $2-billion worth of different trade agreements in aviation, nuclear technology, blueberries, actually, as well as our particular agreement.
Premier Wynne was over in China in October and she signed about a billion dollars' worth of deals in clean technologies such as in food safety, pollution control, those kinds of things. The Chinese are quite keen to learn from the expertise that Ontario brings to that. I think you're seeing a number of examples where we do have expertise or products and services that are of use to Chinese consumers. For example, when I was in China last year I noted that Ontario icewine is very popular with young Chinese women.
So I think there's a long list and I think with the renminbi deal that list is only going to get longer. It's not just about complicated financial transactions. Those are a part of it, those are important, but the exciting potential of this is that it's across the economy if we can take advantage of it. We have to step up to the plate, all of us, to make it happen.