Absolutely.
We always house our advocacy in four main buckets: access to talent; access to capital; access to customers, which is about procurement and international trade opportunities; and the marketplace frameworks that I've mentioned today.
Working backwards, the marketplace framework piece, as I mentioned, in digital sectors is the fintech initiative to launch a financial sector legislative review focused on digitization of money, namely digital currencies. Interestingly enough, at this particular moment, it will include cryptocurrency and stable coins.
There are also some of the clean-tech initiatives around creating investment taxes for organizations that are focused on net-zero technologies and battery storage. In cybersecurity, there is a massive investment of $875 million over five years. This definitely indicates to the market that the government is getting serious about cybersecurity. Tax updates related to SR and ED are still under way. Then there is access to customers and developing new tools and guidelines to support green procurement and money going towards health technology procurement, which is a huge barrier for Canadian technology companies that are in the health space in terms of their accessing their own markets. Access to capital was interesting, and I think we've already talked today about the innovation and investment agency and how that will be very critical to get right and will need to be steered by experts in how that is set up operationally and what that will look like for outputs in the Canadian economy. The Canada growth fund was also mentioned by one of your colleagues earlier today, aimed at attracting the right kind of investment to Canada, and it will also be very critical.
I hope that's a helpful list on that front.