Thank you for that question.
Our mandate, given by Parliament, is to invest in university research, but we recognize that although knowledge in its own right is extremely valuable and leads to many unexpected economic, social, and environmental benefits, we think we can play a more active role in moving that knowledge into the commercialization arena, particularly in the area of knowledge transfer, knowledge translation. That's why in my remarks I indicated investing in programs facilitating that knowledge translation; in our case, that would be infrastructure. It occurs best, we think, in an environment in which the researchers, the private sector, and the financial sector are all interacting very closely.
It's been said that ultimately innovation commercialization is a social process. In other words, people have to be in reasonably close proximity and interact. With additional funding, that is one area in which CFI sees itself as potentially playing an important role. It is a narrow window, but as my colleagues have indicated, it's a window that is too early for the private sector, by and large, because it is still somewhat risky. Nevertheless, with the three sectors working together, we think there could be more of the knowledge translation, which will then ultimately lead to the commercialization.