Thank you for the question.
I'm not specifically familiar with the example you've given, so I can't make a comment on that. I think, in general, what we do see is that we have committees like this within our organization, Electro-Federation. We have senior people from a lot of electrical companies and mechanical companies, and we all talk about the fact that there are issues. Where we have difficulty is getting people to be very specific on their own individual products.
We said here today that Eaton has said it, and another company called Schneider has come out and indicated what they have. But what happens here is that companies don't want their name associated with counterfeit products because it has a negative effect on their market. So they're very, very shy about opening up to the press or putting that in writing so that people can actually say, Company XYZ has a fake product, because nobody else will buy that product again. They're very careful with that, so it's hard to get that kind of information. But we do know there's a significant amount of it going on. Given the fact that only 1% of the containers, we're told by Canada Border Services, are actually inspected, if we pick up a lot of counterfeit equipment, then how much is coming past that we don't see?