If you think about the electrical code, for example, the CSA maintains the Canadian electrical code, the CEC, and it's updated every three years. It's then incorporated by reference in provincial regulations, because the provinces are responsible for electrical safety.
In the U.S. there is a code, managed by the National Fire Protection Association, the NFPA. It's called the national electrical code. That code is also issued every three years.
We see differences between the U.S.-based code and the Canadian code, and we also see time lags between the changes that are made to the U.S. code and these changes coming to be accepted or implemented in the Canadian code. In some cases, this results in significant time lags for the incorporation or deployment of new technologies or ideas in Canada, because we're always one cycle late. In other cases, some people will say that they don't agree with this or that, which means that industry needs to certify products twice.
That's the reason we think it's important for us to seek industry input, so that the standards and codes that are not aligned and that create the biggest grief to these organizations are looked at. That way, we can come up with this concept of joint standards when it makes sense to do so.