I want to thank you, and, if I may, I'll add my words to the chairman's. Your involvement is a great addition to this committee. This is one of the very serious committees of the House.
You're quite right, and I think ELYSIS is a prime example of that. We went from something in the labs to something that we're trying to commercialize. This is exactly what we need to do in all technology. I agree with you.
Let me also say thank you to the officials I have. I just want to acknowledge Deputy Kennedy, who is with me. He has been helping me at every step of the way.
I think that the industrial policy of this country has taken a track like we've never seen before. Sometimes I go back to what C.D. Howe wrote in his time in the building that I sit in. We have really pushed the boundaries now of industrial policy to a new high.
I would say, if I come back to your question on ELYSIS, that Quebec has the largest smelter in the world, if you exclude China. The last one was in Iceland about 10 years ago. You have companies like Apple, if you can imagine, that would invest, and that is a testament to what we have achieved as a nation.