Indeed, the truth of the matter is that national security needs to be flexible, because what is a threat today may not have been one last year. The best illustration of that is, as we were talking about with Mr. Masse earlier, personal protective equipment. A year ago a company investing in a manufacturing company that is developing PPE would not have popped up on anyone's radar, but now it would fall into play with regard to supply chains and dealing with pandemics.
National security needs to be flexible. To expand on the comment that Mr. Hahlweg just made, Natural Resources Canada may talk about critical minerals, for example, and Health Canada may talk about supply chains for vaccines. At Public Safety, we're particularly interested in sensitive technologies like artificial intelligence or quantum computing. Different departments have different areas of expertise and they can flag certain things that are of importance to national security. With that flexibility, we're then able to turn our attention to various investments to decide whether or not there needs to be mitigation or action taken with regard to any potential investment.