With respect to Buy America in particular, one of the ideas that has been developed among the foreign affairs negotiators is to essentially get the U.S. to agree to what's called the flow-down provision, because a lot of the Buy America provisions get activated because they're federal provisions that are carried on with the money that flows from Washington to the state. If you can get some agreement to exempt those resources from those particular requirements, the state-level project in Connecticut or Illinois will not have to face the challenges that it currently does from Buy America.
Now that requires being willing to negotiate and trade things off. I certainly know from my friends close to the negotiations that there's been some appetite to discuss perhaps trade-offs on, shall we say, dairy products or other things of that nature. But this is something Canada will have to weigh against the broader trade-offs that will come to the negotiations and decide what they're willing to give up and whatnot.
In terms of Canada directly, we've spent a lot of the last nine months working on what's called the integrity framework, ensuring that the supplier manuals are up to date and consistent with global standards for how we do procurement. It's something that's really important so we get better results domestically and internationally.