Yes. That's the sort of thing that can make Canadian companies.... Anything that changes the cost structure in a company can provide a net edge, if you like, in competing for the next contract. It means translating that into a lower price for the foreign buyer so that another company or some other country doesn't get the transaction.
Of course, the Canadian dollar looms large in that arithmetic, because with a lower dollar you're able to decide whether to offer a 5% lower price, say, or a 3% lower price, and have a 2% higher profit and hire more people. All those things are complicated decisions. It varies a lot from company to company.