It's going to take more than just a free trade agreement. We continue to face competitiveness headwinds. Canada is one of the highest-cost jurisdictions in which to manufacture, so the question becomes how we can reduce our cost structures. For instance, the electricity rates in Ontario are two to three times higher than those in our competing jurisdictions in the United States. We have other costs. Potentially we will have costs for carbon pricing, which is why I make the recommendation that we must have a revenue-neutral approach. Otherwise it's seen as another tax, and that does not sit well with decision-makers for new investment. It's a tax we would pay that our competing jurisdictions don't have.
These are all things now that we have to coordinate. We have to move forward with them in a holistic fashion and determine how we can make a better business environment here and lower our costs to attract the new investment. That whole issue is not static. Other jurisdictions continue to re-evaluate their position in terms of competitiveness and support.