Absolutely. We are working right now on two great health innovation opportunities. One is called the Thunder Bay Regional Research Institute, and it is home to one of the eight cyclotrons across Canada. It has recently received its licence to not only produce isotopes, but also to sell isotopes in non-health form. Private sector companies are now coming to them and saying, “You have a regional strength here in developing these opportunities and working with us to continue research and development in that health field”.
In Sudbury, we have the Advanced Medical Research Institute of Canada, which has been focused on vaccine-related activities. It is attracting a lot of interest from private sector companies and is spinning off business opportunities. The importance of that is that the spin-off opportunities are happening in northern Ontario in these technology clusters.
We're certainly building on the success of the Centre for Excellence in Mining, which started very small with companies back when Vale was Inco and companies were just providing services to the local or regional mining activities. That has grown to become world class, and is leading technology development for mining across the world. We've built on those experiences. We don't just throw money on the table, saying, “Here is the cluster, let's build it”. It has to be led by the private sector in partnership with strong research. In both of these cases, we have the universities. We have four universities in northern Ontario. The two main universities are key, along with the hospitals and other entities and municipalities, all partnering to grow those opportunities.