Why don't I start? Thank you for the question.
I would say there is an inflection point right now in Canada and, frankly, across the globe, as 5G will be the biggest generational investment in wireless since the beginning of wireless, and 5G in Canada will [Technical difficulty—Editor]. It will be a 70% greater investment than there was for 4G, and it will lead to greater opportunity. A recent Accenture study said that it will create $40 billion of additional GDP, 250,000 sustained jobs and 154,000 network-building construction jobs. That's a big move for any country, and that's a big opportunity for us as a nation.
We led the world in 4G. We were only ever second to South Korea. We fought tooth and nail between first and second. Bear in mind that South Korea is the size of New Brunswick, with a population of 51 million people. So we did well in 4G, and our goal is to do very well in 5G, because it means everything to the future of what we can do with that technology—what it means for agrotech, what it means for transportation, what it means for resources, oil and gas, and what it means for health care. The list goes on. We need a modern policy framework and viewpoint that really focus on that opportunity, because in 5G we're not competing with one another; we're competing with other nations and what it means for the future of Canada. Imagine where we would be without 4G in Canada; 5G is a massive opportunity.
As it relates to satellite technology, I would say to you that we'll continue to develop and nurture many technologies: fixed wireless, fibre and satellite. It's going to take an assortment of technologies to solve the problem [Technical difficulty—Editor].