If I might add to that, to talk about “what happens if”, what we're seeing globally is that many nations of the world, formerly developing nations, are working hard to have what we have. They're investing billions of dollars to become competitive, because they can. You don't have to dig it out of the ground. You just have to train your people. Any country in the world can compete, and they're all trying to compete in this space.
The risk for us is that as we lose these companies, if they scale back or they go under or they leave the country for other jurisdictions that have funding to deal with that one, in a way we're kind of pushing...where we expect ourselves to be, worst case, is back 15 years. It's almost like rebooting the whole sector; we're going to start over again.
The difference this time, if we're starting over, is that 15 years ago when BIOTEC was getting going, there were a few developing nations. We had great science; we were it out there—us, the U.S., and Europe on that one. It's a totally different competition world today, and we'd be starting over in a much more competitive environment. It's going to be harder for us to recapture.
In other words, does that mean we'll never see these technologies come to Canada? No, they'll be developed elsewhere in the world, but it will be like everything else: we'll buy someone else's finished goods instead of capturing the value at home.