We have 4,300 or 4,400 employees in Saguenay—Lac-Saint-Jean today who are working on the best technology, AP60, and on the others. We are trying to recreate a competitive advantage for the benefit of those people so that in 50 years our successors will say that this is what ultimately preserved those jobs. That brings me back to what Mr. Simard said. Will it be exactly the same jobs and the same number of jobs? I don't know. However, I am convinced that if we are not the first to get on the aluminum decarbonizing train, those jobs will be in danger one day. The Americans will be telling us that our aluminum is very nice, but they want a product with a very small carbon footprint, and otherwise they will buy it elsewhere.
So we are already trying to preserve the leading role played by the Quebec basin in the production of aluminum for North America. That is what ELYSIS is. I cannot tell you today whether they will be the same jobs and whether there will be more jobs or fewer jobs. In any event, this leading role creates jobs in our company and in all our suppliers and subcontractors, and puts Quebec in a position of influence in North American industry. That is what we want to do.