There's a high percentage of alignment between the individuals in the entities that Canada has sanctioned and that some of our largest partners, mainly the United States, the European Union, and the U.K., have sanctioned. This is not by accident; it is by design.
Of course, we have different mechanisms for doing our own assessment and finding the open source information that we need to justify the sanctioning of individuals, but we do coordinate and we do exchange information to reinforce the lists.
The whole point of sanctions is to tighten the net. It's to prevent openings in any given jurisdiction for individuals to be able to funnel funds and do business with citizens of that country or region.
As for the impact this has, I think it has maximal impact when we have as much coordination as possible and when the announcement of sanctions towards entities is made as closely as possible at the same time.
For the reasons I just stated, if an individual Russian oligarch, for example, is sanctioned in Canada but not in the U.S. and not in the U.K., it creates an opening to funnel funds and therefore to continue what we consider to be feeding the war machine. Importance of coordination and tightening the net is top of mind when we identify potential targets.