There's a subtlety there, because a foreign prime most likely may not transfer the entire set of intellectual property into another Canadian competitor, because that's their crown jewel. We will have to find a mechanism, and usually that's by buying data rights. The crown would have to purchase it to make that happen.
Nevertheless, as I mentioned, on any usual platforms you would incentivize those prime contractors to do that. We would do it nowadays by using our value proposition construct. We would say, “You could lose a competition, company X, company Y, prime contractor. You are going to be in a fair fight, one for one, and one of you is potentially going to transfer work into a Canadian entity.” That's how you might win. It really is a point system scoring that will incentivize that happening in a competitive environment.
The other thing you could do is to look really long term. Canada is buying a number of pieces of equipment from a certain country, perhaps. If there is a certain strategic country we want to buy from, you would start doing a government-to-government deal where you would start to say, “We want this type of job and this type, and this type of job in Canada, and we will end up purchasing that platform as long as we are assured that we will be getting that type of job over the long term sustainably in Canada and the intellectual property rights that make it happen.” When you get those rights, you want to be able to allow for the re-export of any foreground intellectual property. Basically, we create something in Canada so that the prime gives us the intellectual property, we create something in Canada in a Canadian variant, and we can export that to the rest of the world. You may sometimes hear it called a “world product mandate”. That is the motherlode, if you will, of intellectual property transfer. It is entirely possible to make it happen.