There already is, I think, a growing demand. I think there's been a shift away.... China became kind of in vogue about 20 years ago, when they entered the WTO. It became easier to get stuff into our market, because it was a low-cost manufacturing jurisdiction, although they're not as low cost as they used to be. Also, I think we've found out through this and other events that they're not a stable and secure supply of key things at key times. That's not just for PPE. That's also for sub-assemblies and other things that manufacturers use and import, or for consumer products and other things like that.
I don't think the demand for China and Chinese goods and their role in global supply chains is going to change immediately, but I think that over time there's going to be a real opportunity, and there's going to be a shift in consumer, business and government demand for more locally made products. I don't just mean “buy Canada”. I mean that it will probably be more of a “buy North American” type of approach in leveraging things like the Canada-U.S.-Mexico free trade agreement to bolster up the domestic manufacturing capacity within this region and to supply yourselves first and then export from there.
We were super thrilled that in that agreement there's a very little known clause in Chapter 26 that talks about domestic “North American” industrial “competitiveness”. It is basically about how are the three countries going to work together on domestic competitiveness. That's the key. If we don't fix our competitive imbalance that we have with China and the rest of the world, we never will stand up the size of manufacturing sector that I think we can or that we deserve.