Absolutely, hindsight is 20/20, but I think it's extremely clear that, if you look at success around the globe, decisive and upfront funding of multiple vaccine candidates all the way through to the end was key to both their success and their speed.
We talked a lot about being able to speed up clinical development. Previously, the average time for a vaccine to get from discovery to approval was over 10 years, and without compromising safety, we've been able to dramatically compress that time by spending money that's called “at risk” on multiple stages in parallel. I think this was absolutely required to get to the goal much more quickly, and I think in the future, not only can we....
I think we're missing commercial manufacturing capacity in Canada. We have the great seeds of that, and obviously investments have been made to improve that, but I think we can make much more substantial investments. This will then put the burden in the future really on discovery and clinical development, which I think requires upfront investment in multiple shots on goal to ensure that one of those shots gets in.