Thank you for the question.
I think it could happen at a couple of levels.
In a province, if you look at the tiers of government.... I can give you an example. For instance, if you pick a sector, right now, we're looking at a kit-of-parts elementary school. The provincial standards for space allotments that dictate how much space per child is given to a school don't speak directly to exactly what David was talking about—the economically viable manufacturing dimensions. It comes down to numbers and space. You are precluding technology being advanced, because you're embedding inefficiencies in that. You've given a certain kind of dimension to a room that just doesn't work with the manufacturing in an economic way. If you can get those conversations happening with the manufacturers, you could also get the provincial regulations speaking to the municipal, and understand the federal initiatives, as well.
I think it could work within a province, but there needs to be interprovincial dialogue to help the different industries across the country. There are new factories coming up now in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, and there is certainly an embedded, robust industry in Quebec and a robust industry in British Columbia. How do we bridge right across...? Is ask this because the forest bridges right across the country. There is potential in that economic engine, and it's renewable.