Thank you very much for your question.
When we at the Canadian Space Agency look to the future, we do not see a bunch of dark clouds on the horizon. We look back at what the Canadian Space Agency has been able to achieve over the last years. We look forward to things in the future--some of which you mentioned--and continued successful ventures by the agency.
Canada has done remarkably well in the area of space, and we're not flattering ourselves when we say this. I think this is recognized and there are others who say this. NASA and the European Space Agency look to Canada as a significant partner, and continue to do so. They come to us essentially for our contributions.
You indicated a number of initiatives that are under way, and some just recently completed. We have just put Dextre, the final contribution of Canada's robotic suite, on the space station that went up. It's a successful piece of ingenuity. It demonstrates Canada's knowhow in the area of space.
You mentioned the James Webb space telescope, which is the in-space telescope that will replace Hubble as the next generation. It's a huge piece of the kit, and Canada, through the Canadian Space Agency, is contributing to that.
I could go down a list of other achievements. A lander that's going to Mars in May, I believe, contains a piece of Canadian technology. The weather station on that contains some Canadian technology.
There's always more that we could be doing, but I'm quite convinced that the future is fairly bright.