I definitely think there's a perception like that, and maybe there's some lack of spotlight on some of the opportunities.
This relates a bit to the second wave of recommendations on innovation. There were two elements there that we hope will also improve business investment. One is, as you were saying, putting a spotlight on six to eight sectors, including agrifood, because a lot of people don't realize that we have this huge potential. We just want to put a spotlight on it, and I think six of those tables are now under way, including one on agrifood. The second relates to these superclusters, which we're quite excited about. They're bringing universities, SMEs, venture capitalists, and businesses together at scale. I think when we do that.... For example, on aquaculture—although I know that's not in your municipality, but I'll just use that one example—we are punching way below our weight in Canada just given what we have with our resources. We have some amazing universities and amazing research under way, and we have capital, but it's not all put together.
I think, as you said, that by having greater ambition about what we should do and saying this is something that's good—and it's not about providing any subsidies or doing anything like that, but just putting a spotlight on it—a lot can be unleashed. Not to go on about agrifood, because the chair knows I'm totally biased towards that, but it's interesting that in the previous Governor General's book on innovation, which he did with Tom Jenkins, he argued that more than half of the innovations they talk about come from agrifood. We've been very good at it. The challenge is that we haven't scaled or commercialized those innovations. We come up with good ideas in Canada—we actually punch above our weight on that front—but we don't commercialize them. I do think awareness of this is critical.