Thank you for the question.
I would say a couple of things. First, on the point about the U.S. being ahead of us on the curve on legislation, I would just clarify on that point that the U.S. has not introduced supply chain reporting obligations on their entities, so the type of legislation we're talking about is not something that has been enacted in the U.S. as of yet. However, as we noted, they're certainly well ahead of us in terms of implementation of the ban. There are basically two complementary pieces that we're potentially looking at here. If Canada were to introduce supply chain reporting obligations of the type that the U.K., Australia, France, the Netherlands and others have introduced, we would potentially be the first country in the world to have those supply chain reporting obligations coupled with an import ban. As I noted, the U.S. is the only other country in the world to have an import ban in place to date.
I think there is a recognition that a lot more needs to be done in the way of international coordination on this issue. We have seen the issue taking greater prominence over the last few years, which I think is an excellent thing, but we do recognize that there is more that could be done in the way of international coordination. These discussions are taking place at the ILO. They are taking place at the G7.