The scale-up is part of it. It's the information. With the North American infrastructure bank the financing is a small element that we have with the Americans along the border. The bigger element is information. We talk about integrated supply and production chains. We don't know where they are.
Our competitors in other blocs, when they're deciding where to build a port, a bridge, a border crossing, have access to information that goes beyond the border, into supply and production chains on both sides. They can use that intelligence to improve where they place their infrastructure, and how they build it. We lack this. It's a critical information gap that's a competitive disadvantage for us. That's the main reason for the bank to exist.
On the political side, there's also getting the Americans to a permanent table and not having to worry about whether or not things are going to be built along the border, when they're going to be built, or how they're going to be built.