Exactly. Thank you for that, because I think what we need to get on the record is that we have a really robust, healthy steel industry in Canada. We've removed the uncertainty of the section 232 tariffs that were placed by the U.S. administration. We've come to an agreement there, which is great.
At the same time, while we ensure that we can guard against surges in imported steel—steel that I would argue is made in some jurisdictions under less environmentally stringent methods and procedures than those here in Canada—we can also ensure that any domestic consumers of steel, when the steel cannot be sourced locally in Canada, the United States or Mexico, will have access to that steel without the predicament of then having CITT investigate an increase—I'm not going to call it a surge—of steel over a two- or three-month period related to a specific project.