The adverse consequence is that there will be more consolidation in this sector. We know that when we participate in these consolidation exercises, we will be up against our foreign competitors. They're looking to continue acquiring and integrating other companies as well. What will happen is we will lose out. They'll acquire the entity; we won't. We'll have lost an opportunity; they'll have gotten bigger still, exacerbating our already sub-scale position.
That's the point of what we're talking about, the increasing marginalization of our business over time. I wouldn't be so stark as to say that in the absence of the elimination of these restrictions, Telesat is out of business 24 months from now. It's not going to be like that. What it will mean is that we'll be less and less productive relative to our larger competitors. We are not going to be able to expand to these overseas markets, and those overseas markets are growing more quickly than the North American market. We'll simply become marginalized, and we won't be able to sufficiently leverage not only the investments that we have made in our facilities and our satellites, but we'll not be able to leverage our people. That's not good.