Thank you very much for the question.
We have done a review of the equipment that we have in operation from Nuctech and we looked at the contracts that have been fulfilled in this space. We have leaned into our colleagues at CSE and elsewhere to gather their expertise to make sure we have done that.
We have satisfied ourselves that we have had no security breaches or incidents of concern with this equipment to date. We are looking forward to strengthening the contracting regime around this. For example, we are working with our partners in Public Safety and at Procurement Canada, and public safety more broadly, to enhance the contracting security guidelines to ensure that transportation technology—more specifically X-ray detection equipment in the port of entry space—is considered within that policy.
We will be looking to move forward with a national security exemption for our operations in this space. Equally, we are looking to accelerate our life cycling on this to ensure that we can move forward with ensuring that any new equipment or any equipment we have in operation meets those new security guidelines.
I will add that in the meantime, we have obviously reviewed our mitigation strategies, which I mentioned earlier. As you can never fully eliminate risk, it's important for us to ensure we have the right operational procedures, departmental security procedures and tools in place for our staff, so we can mitigate any residual risks that may be there.