Thank you so much, my wonderful colleague. This is the first time that we're at committee together. It's terrific to be here with you.
As Canada's trade minister, I often am able to tell Canadian businesses that they have unprecedented access to the world's economy. We have access to over 65% of the economy. We're the only G7 country with a free trade agreement with every other G7 country. We have important economic zones, whether it be here or in North America, where we successfully renegotiated the new NAFTA. We successfully concluded the agreement in Europe through CETA. We successfully negotiated a comprehensive and progressive high-standards agreement in the Asia-Pacific through the CPTPP. I've just announced that we're going to enter into negotiations with Indonesia—with hundreds of millions of new customers through that market—as well as the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, ASEAN.
These are very ambitious agreements that we want to absolutely make, but here's the thing: Agreements are only that. Agreements are only good if you can actually help your businesses grow and get into those markets.
Let me give you an example of a terrific female-led organization that recently, in 2019, expanded its warehouse by 5,000 feet. In 2020, she has now purchased a new warehouse. By the way, she has received support through the women's entrepreneurship ecosystem fund, and today she's exporting into countries such as Japan, Vietnam and Australia and experiencing growth.
When we talk about growing our businesses into those markets, it is absolutely being ambitious about negotiating free trade agreements, but it is also equally being ambitious to make sure that we are helping our businesses seize those opportunities and not leaving people behind, such as indigenous businesses, Black-owned businesses and women entrepreneurs. I can tell you countless stories like the one I just shared right now about successful businesses exporting.