Thanks. It's an excellent question.
For a long time, Canada has played a leadership role in terms of the satellite industry, something that I think is often downplayed or overlooked in Canadian circles. This is an area of particular competence for us.
It has applications for our neighbours. Certainly our Arctic capabilities, through the intelligence we gather through satellites—not only classified stuff about activities that are going on there, but also weather data. It is very important to our circumpolar neighbours as well.
I think this is very much a foreign policy issue. We tend to look at satellites often in terms of how they're instrumentalized for defence issues, the amount of information that's being gathered. A lot of this is being done through the private sector. There are constellations of polar orbital satellites that are being launched quite regularly, and a lot of Canadian companies are at the forefront of this.
Radarsat Constellation, I think, is a very important part of Canada moving forward and having something to deliver when we sit down at the table, particularly with the United States, when it comes to continental defence. I certainly think this is something that should be a high priority and it's something that should be considered, also recognizing that there is a lot of excessive capacity already up there in orbit that we can tap into. In some cases, it's not always about creating something new. In some ways, it's tapping into capabilities that are already there.